oyinbo55 wrote:
On Oct 1, 11:36 am, "Richard Brodie" <r.bro...@rl.ac.uk> wrote:
"oyinbo55" <oyinb...@gmail.com> wrote in message

news:2feb36fc-106c-4d7c-a697-db59971dc...@a7g2000yqo.googlegroups.com...

Using the standard 19200 baud results in gobbledegook from the
multimeter.
You aren't going to notice a 0.1% clock skew within 1 byte.
Forget about the difference between 19200 and 19230.

If you have a scope handy, see what the output waveform
looks like, and check the timings. If not play around with
the rates, parity etc., until you find something that works.

Thank you, Richard, you are absolutely right.  Looking back at the
documentation for the instrument, I found the following:

"The data format complies with JIS 7Bits-transmission code with a baud
rate of 19230. "

   OK.  First off, 19200 baud should work.  19230 is a number which
comes from devices that use a 4MHz crystal for the clock and divide
by 208.  4000000 / 208 = 19230.769, which is as close as you can get
to 19200 baud given a 4MHz timing source.   Serial ports
can usually tolerate an error of about 1/4 a bit time, which is 2.5%.
Since you're running a little fast, I'd suggest sending 2 stop bits,
which guarantees the receiver can't gain on the transmitter during
long blocks sent at full speed.


I had overlooked the JIS transmission code because I didn't know what
that meant.  (It is the Japanese Industrial Standard).  Changing my
script to display the data one character at a time, I found it was
sprinkled with escape characters that Japanese machines use to switch
from ASCII to Kanji characters and back.

Does Python have a module that will translate the data stream and
display normal ASCII characters?  The escape codes appear to alter the
values of the characters in some systematic way.

   If you're really receiving content in Shift-JIS, you just need to
translate it into Unicode.  Python can do that.  See

http://www.velocityreviews.com/forums/t646242-251-shiftjis-to-unicode.html

Now you'll have Unicode strings that contain kanjii, which Python can process
just fine.

Printing kanjii in a terminal window is troublesome on some operating systems.
But it's possible to get everything working in Unicode, which will result in
kanjii text appearing.

Reading the Japanese may be a problem, although you can put the text through
Google Translate.

                                        John Nagle
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