User manual
Table Of Contents
- Front Cover
- Important User Information
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1 - Scanner Features
- 2 - Connecting the Scanner
- Overview
- Scanner Cable Connection
- Scanner Cable to Synapse Cable Connection
- Scanner Emulation Synapse Cable Connections
- RS-232 Synapse Cable Connections
- Keyboard Wedge Synapse Cable Connections
- Scanner to Enhanced Decoder Scanner Port Connection
- Scanner to Enhanced Decoder Aux Port Connection
- Scanner to Flexible Interface (RB) Module Connection
- Scanner to PLC Connection
- Scanner to SLC Connection
- 3 - Operating the Scanner
- 4 - Configuring the Scanner
- 5 - Communication Setup (Synapse Cable)
- 6 - Troubleshooting and Maintenance
- A - Specifications
- B - Scanner Pinout Collections
- C - ASCII Chart
- D - AIM Code Identifiers
- E - Advanced Data Formatting
- F - European Union Directives
- Glossary
- Index
- Back Cover

Glossary G–7
Publication 2755-6.4
H
Host Computer
A computer that serves other terminals in a network, providing such
services as computation, database access, supervisory programs, and
network control.
I
IEC
International Electrotechnical Commission. This international
agency regulates laser safety by specifying various laser operation
classes based on power output during operation.
Intercharacter Gap
The space between two adjacent bar code characters in a discrete
code.
Interleaved Bar Code
A bar code in which characters are paired together, using bars to
represent the first character and the intervening spaces to represent
the second.
Interleaved 2 of 5
A binary bar code symbology representing character pairs in groups
of five bars and five interleaved spaces. Interleaving provides
for greater information density. The location of wide elements
(bar/spaces) within each group determines which characters
are encoded. This continuous code type uses no intercharacter
spaces. Only numeric (0 to 9) and START / STOP characters
may be encoded.