User guide


When programming in the field, certain characters are most conveniently represented by their
hexadecimal rather than their ASCII values. The table below shows the hexadecimal equivalent
of each ASCII character:
ASCII to HEX Conversion Table
Space
.
Table 2. ASCII to HEX Conversion Table
] carriage return with line feed
} carriage return (no line feed)
• — space character
E Escape key
The
X/ values defined in this section are the variables used in the fields of the Command
Response Table.
X! — Output
1, 2, 3, or 4 (HDMI DA4)
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6 (HDMI DA6)
X@ — Video mute status
0 = disabled
1 = video mute
2 = video and sync mute
X# — Status
0 = disabled, off, or undetected
1 = enabled, on, or detected
X$ — Video color bit depth
0 = auto (based on EDID of sink)
1 = force 8‑bit
2 = pass‑through
X% — EDID memory location (see “HDMI DA4 and HDMI DA6 EDID Memory Locations"
Table on page 12)
X^ — EDID data as 256 bytes of Hex data (text representation)
X& — Native resolution and refresh rate (translated from Hex)
for example: 1600x1200 @60Hz
X*— Controller firmware version to the second decimal place
X(— Unit name: Up to 24 alphanumeric characters (including the hyphen [‑])
No spaces are allowed
There is no distinction between upper and lower case letters
The first character must be a letter
The last character cannot be a hyphen (‑)
HDMIDA4andHDMIDA6•SISCommands 16