Types Of Prompts; Yes/No Prompts - Allen-Bradley A-B QUALITY DL20 Series User Manual

Dataliner message display
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Chapter 3
Getting Started

Types of Prompts

3–4
The master address of the DL20 then appears. A 0 indicates that a master
address was not selected. Chapter 8 tells how to select a master address.
Finally, this prompt appears (unless the DL20 was powered down in the
run mode.):
If the DL20 was powered down in the run mode, this prompt appears:
possibly followed by other messages.
To return to edit mode, press [Esc] on your terminal three times. The EDIT?
prompt will appear.
You are now ready to create messages.
When programming the DL20, you are prompted to enter specific types of
information. The DL20 uses two types of prompts, Yes/No prompts and
numeric prompts. Each type requires a specific type of response.

Yes/No Prompts

Yes/No prompts require that you type [Y] for Yes or [N] for No. Only the
letters Y or N (upper or lowercase) are accepted as responses. An example
Yes/No prompt is:
Press [Return] after typing [Y] or [N] to accept the response. For example:
Some Yes/No prompts have a default response that displays. For example:
To accept the default, just press [Return]. To change the response, enter [Y]
and [Return].
MASTER ADDRESS:
EDIT?
AUTORUN
EDIT?
EDIT? [Y]
PRINT MSGS? N
0

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