HP 64782 User Manual page 70

For the graphical user interface
Hide thumbs Also See for 64782:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

highlight in a given direction when it discovers a delimiting character not
determined to be part of the string. A common delimiter would, of course, be
a space.
When you press and hold the mouse button and drag the pointer to highlight
text, the interface copies all highlighted text to the entry buffer when you
release the mouse button.
Because the interface displays absolute addresses as hex values, any copied
and pasted string that can be interpreted as a hexadecimal value (that is, the
string contains only numbers 0 through 9 and characters "a" through "f")
automatically has an "h" appended.
If you have multiple Graphical User Interface windows open, a copy-and-paste
action in any window causes the text to appear in all entry buffers in all
windows. That is because although there are a number of entry buffers being
displayed, there is actually only one entry buffer and it is common to all
windows. That means you can copy a symbol or an address from one window
and then use it in another window.
On a memory display or trace display, a symbol may not be completely
displayed because there are too many characters to fit into the width limit for
a particular column of the display. To make a symbol usable for
copy-and-paste, you can scroll the screen left or right to display all, or at least
more, of the characters from the symbol. The interface displays absolute
addresses as hex values.
Text pasted into the entry buffer replaces that which is currently there. You
cannot use paste to append text to existing text already in the entry buffer.
See "To copy-and-paste from the entry buffer to the command line entry
area" for information about pasting the contents of the entry buffer into the
command line entry area.
Entering Commands
To copy-and-paste to the entry buffer
69

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents