Star Micronics NB-15 User Manual page 103

Star micronics printer user's manual
Table of Contents

Advertisement

95
which we'll get to shortly.
1st
byte
2nd
bvte
r
3rd
byte
123456769
d3zEl
126
64
32
16
6
4
2
1
126
64
32
16
6
4
2
1
126
64
32
32
16
16
6 6
4 4
2 2
1 1
ASCII code:
66
Left *pace:
I
Right space: 2
Figure 8-7.
Add the values of the dots in each column and write
the sum of each column at the bottom.
n
Assigning a value of character
space
Besides
being
able to specify
the actual
width
of the
character,
this printer allows you to specify the position in the
standard grid where the character will print. You must specify
the dot column in which the printed character starts and the dot
column in which the character ends. Why, you may ask, would
you want to define a character this way instead of merely defin-
ing the overall width of the character?
Because this printer's
draft proportional
character definitions can also be used to print
normal width characters,
which are twelve dot columns wide.
And by centering
even the narrow characters
in the complete
grid they will look good even you aren't printing them propor-
tionally.
The three bytes are used to specify the width of the character
and the space to be allowed on either side of it. The left space (in
dot columns) is specified by m0 and the right space is specified
by m2. The second byte (ml) specifies the number of columns of
dots that will be printed by the character.
By varying the width
of the character itself and the spaces around it, you can actually

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents