Creating Duplicate Fields
If a line of data is identical to a previous bitmap or next-bitmap
field, the duplicate field allows you to repeat the dot sequence
without retyping the data. A duplicate field represents one row of
dots on the image. Duplicate fields are useful when you have a
graphic with a lot of repetition.
Syntax
D,adjdir,adjamt,count
p
D1. D Duplicate Field.
D2. adjdir Increments or decrements the row count. Inserts the
duplicate line after or before the current row.
0 Increments (inserts after)
1 Decrements (inserts before)
For example:
B,50,35,R,"GsSsG"
p
D,0,20,2
p
inserts row 50 again at row 70 and row 90. Rows
70 and 90 do not have to be defined later.
D3. adjamt Amount of row adjustment in dot rows. Range: 0 - 999
(0 - 99 for 9403/9805). The above example adjusts the
duplicate field to image on row 70 and 90 (adding 20 to the
current row count).
D4. count Number of times to duplicate the line. Range: 0 - 999
(0 - 99 for 9403/9805).
Example
B,117,24,H,"03FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFC"
p
D,0,1,2
p
Defines a duplicate field that is imaged after the bitmap line. This
field duplicates the preceding bitmap line twice (at row 118 and
119).
You can use constant text, line, or box fields in a graphic packet
to create a compliance label overlay. See Chapter 3, "Defining
Fields," for more information about these fields.
5-18
Creating Graphics