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HP 262SA - Character-Oriented Cursor Movement Keys; Vertical Movement Keys; Scroll Function Keys

HP 262SA
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3276na Emulation Mode
CHARACTER-ORIENTED CURSOR MOVEMENT KEYS
The
IBM 3276 provides five
keys
that
move
the
cursor
a
character
at
a time. All
of
these
keys
repeat
their
function
if
you
continue
to
hold
them
down.
Vertical Movement Keys
IBM
3276.
The
CURSOR UP
and
the
CURSOR DOWN
keys
move
the
cursor
vertically
through
a column.
Depending
upon
the
model number, a 3276
Control
Unit
may
display
24,
32,
or
43
lines
(where
each
line
is
80 columns wide).
The
vertical
cursor
movement
keys
wrap
on
the
top
and
bottom
lines
of
the
workspace
area,
not
the
physical
dimensions
of
the
screen.
HP
2625A.
The
_
and
_
keys
duplicate
the
action
of
the
CURSOR UP
and
CURSOR
DOWN
keys. However,
when
the
screen
format
exceeds 24
lines
and
the
cursor
is
in
the
bottom
line,
pressing
the
_
keys
rolls
the
workspace
up
one row so
that
the
cursor
appears
in
the
next
row.
Similarly,
when
the
cursor
is
in
the
top
line
of
the
screen
window
and
text
exists
beyond
the
window's bounds,
pressing
the
_ keys rolls
the
workspace down one row
so
the
cursor
appears
in
the
appropriate
row.
Scroll Function Keys
With
the
HP
2625A, you
may
also
use
the
((Roll"
and
((Page"
keys
to view
lines
that
have
rolled off
the
screen.
When
data
extends
above
the
screen's top border,
pressing
the
II
key
exposes
the
previous
line
in
display memory.
If
you
continue
to
hold
the
key down,
this
action
repeats
until
the
top
line
of
data
becomes
the
first
line
on
the
screen's display.
When
data
exists
below
the
screen's
bottom
border,
pressing
the
key
exposes
the
next
line
in
display memory.
If
you
continue
to
hold
the
key down,
this
action
repeats
until
the
last
line
of
data
in
display
memory
appears
at
the
top of
the
screen.
In
its
IBM
personality,
the
terminal
associates
the
cursor
with
a row
and
column
location.
When
you
press
either
Roll key,
the
cursor
retains
its
current
row
and
column
position
if
this
is possible.
The
cursor
appears
to move therefore
with
the
display
instead
of
remaining
stationary
as
it
does
when
these
keys
are
pressed while
the
terminal
is
in
its
HP
personality.
However, since
the
cursor
always
remains
on
the
screen,
when
the
cursor
is
in
the
screen's top
row
and
the
key
is
pressed,
the
cursor
remains
within
the
screen's
top
row.
Similarly,
when
the
cursor
is
at
the
screen's
bottom
row
and
the
II
key
is
pressed,
the
cursor
remains
within
the
screen's
bottom
row.
Nevertheless,
the
terminal
((remembers"
the
cursor's
initial
row, column
setting.
If
subsequent
Roll
or
Page
operations
display
the
cursor's
initial
location
on
the
screen,
the
terminal
properly
positions
the
cursor
at
this
location.
The.
key
displays
the
first
24 rows
of
the
screen's configured workspace
area.
For
either
a
32 row
or
43 row workspace
area,
this
corresponds to rows 1
through
24.
The
lIB
key
displays
the
last
24
rows
of
the
screen's configured workspace
area.
For
a 32 row
workspace
area,
this
corresponds
to
rows 9-32.
For
a 43 row workspace
area,
this
corresponds
to rows 20-43.
F-29

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