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Crystal Instruments Coco-80 - Ascii Uff; MATLAB File; NI-TDM File; User Defined ASCII File

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CoCo-80 User Manual
135
...
... (zzzz BINARY bytes of data, in format specified by x
and y, above)
... (interleaved as specified by the ASCII dataset 58)
...
-1
When reading or writing a dataset 58b, care must be taken that the binary data
immediately follows the ASCII header lines and the closing ' -1' immediately
follows the binary data. The binary data content is written in the same sequence
as the ASCII dataset 58 (i.e. field order sequence). The field size is NOT used,
however the data type (int/float/double) content is. Note: there are no CR/LF
characters embedded in or following the binary data
ASCII UFF
The CoCo-80 and EDM software also support the ASCII UFF format. The ASCII
UFF file format is a form using the ASCII type to represent all the data sets. For
details, see: http://www.sdrl.uc.edu/uff2/58.asc
MATLAB file
This is the standard file that can be imported into MatLab.
NI-TDM file
This is a structured data format that is defined and widely used by the LabVIEW
from National Instruments.
User Defined ASCII file
This is the ASCII files where you have the freedom to define its attributes and
header format.
.CSV (Microsoft Excel) File
This is the ASCII file that the Microsoft Excel can directly read.
.WAV File
This is the sound wave files that can be played by most of the media players. Due
to limited information a wave file can carry, the wave files exported only contain
very basic waveform shape and it does not hold any attribute information of ODS.
You are expected to use the .WAV file to listen to its sound effect, instead of for
data processing.

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