Rockwell Automation 1747-L5xx SLC 500 Modular Hardware Style User Manual User Manual

Page 257

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Publication 1747-UM011G-EN-P - June 2008

Communicating with Devices on an Ethernet Network 257

Tag Elements

Importing User Page Files to the SLC 5/05 Processor

Follow this procedure to use RSLogix 500 software to import user
page files to the SLC 5/05 ASCII files.

1. In the Project folder (under the Data Files folder), right-click on

the first of the block of four consecutive ASCII files where you
will import the user page HTML file.

2. Click Properties.

3. Click Import HTML.

4. Use the browser to locate the user page HTML file you want to

import.

5. Double-click on the file to select it.

6. Click OK.

7. Repeat this process for each user page file.

Tag Item

Description

#elements

If not specified, this defaults to one. If it is less than one,

also defaults to one. Each element is output using the same

format (whether specified with %format or defaulted). Any

associated comment is displayed only for the first element.

%format

Legal values are %b for binary, %d for decimal, %0 for

octal and %x for hexadecimal. The following file types

allow the format to be specified:

Input

Output

Status

Integer

All other file types are displayed in an appropriate format.

If a %format modifier is present, the format may be

changed by clicking on the file type/number via a web

browser.

#expand

Legal values are #c and #e. This modifier determines

whether the structure file types are displayed in their

expanded or compact formats. If a # modifier is present, the

format may be changed by clicking on the [+]/[-] via a web

browser. If a #modifier is not present, the default display of

expanded is used.

!comment

Data after the exclamation point and up to the closing > is

displayed in the Comment column of the monitor.

Fixed display formats

Float files are always output in floating point format (C%g

format). String files are always output as a null terminated

text string. Binary files are always output as four binary

nibbles. ASCII files are displayed in a memory dump format.

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