Epson 4500 User Manual

Page 133

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User-defined Characters

This example of a character definition program should make this clear:

10 LPRINT CHR$(27)"x0"

20 LPRINT CHR$(27)"&"CHR$(0);

30 LPRINT "@@";
40 LPRINT CHR$(1)CHR$(9)CHR$(1);

50 FOR I=1 TO 27

60 READ A: LPRINT CHR$(A);
70 NEXT I
80 LPRINT "@@@@@"

90 LPRINT CHR$(27)"%"CHR$(1);
100 LPHINT "@@@@@"

110 LPRINT CHR$(27)"%"CHR$(0);
120 LPRINT "@@@@@"

130 END

140

DATA

1,0,0,2,0,0,4,0,0

150 DATA 8,0,0,23,255,240,8,0,0
160

DATA

4,0,0,2,0,0,1,0,0

In line 10, the ESC x0 command selects draft printing.

The actual character definition starts in line 20. The two @ signs in line

30 represent n1 and

n2,

the range of characters being defined (in this

case, a range of 1). Line 40 contains

d0, d1,

and

d2.

The information about the actual character design (which is contained

in the DATA statements at the end of the program) is sent to the printer

in the loop between lines 50 and 70.

Note: When defining Letter Quality or proportional characters, put

a WIDTH statement in your program to prevent carriage return and
line feed codes from interfering with your definitions.

4-26

Software and Graphics

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