Section 7.  Installation 
 
 
SerialInRecord()
2
 
•  Can run in pipeline mode inside the digital measurement task (along with 
SDM instructions) if the COMPort parameter is set to a constant 
argument such as COM1 or COM2, and the number of bytes is also 
entered as a constant. 
•  Simplifies synchronization with one way. 
•  Simplifies working with protocols that send a "record" of data with 
known start and/or end characters, or a fixed number of records in 
response to a poll command. 
•  If a start and end word is not present, then a time gap is the only 
remaining separator of records. Using COM1 or COM2 coincidentally 
detects a time gap of >100 bits if the records are less than 256 bytes. 
•  Buffer size margin (one extra record + one byte). 
1 
Processing instructions 
2 
Measurement instruction in the pipeline mode 
3 
Measurement instruction if expression evaluates to a constant 
 
7.7.17.5.2  Serial I/O Input Programming Basics 
Applications with the purpose of receiving data from another device usually 
include the following procedures. Other procedures may be required depending on 
the application. 
1.  Know what the sensor supports and exactly what the data are.    Most sensors 
work well with TTL voltage levels and RS-232 logic.    Some things to 
consider: 
o  Become thoroughly familiar with the data to be captured. 
o  Can the sensor be polled? 
o  Does the sensor send data on its own schedule? 
o  Are there markers at the beginning or end of data? Markers are very 
useful for identifying a variable length record. 
o  Does the record have a delimiter character such as a comma, space, 
or tab?    Delimiters are useful for parsing the received serial string 
into usable numbers. 
o  Will the sensor be sending multiple data strings? Multiple strings 
usually require filtering before parsing. 
o  How fast will data be sent to the CR800?