H

half-duplex
A communication link in which data transmission is limited to one direction at a time.
half slot addressing
See 1/2-slot addressing.
hexadecimal
The integer values displayed and entered in base 16 (that is, each digit represents 4 bits), prefixed with a "16#," and padded out to the length of the BOOL or integer (1, 8, 16, or 32 bits). Every group of 4 digits is separated by an underscore for legibility when displayed.
high byte
Bits 8 through 15 of a word.
High Integrity Add-On Instruction
A standard or safety Add-On Instruction that has a Signature, which means it has been sealed to prevent changes to the logic and definitions (sometimes referred to as a “sealed AOI”).
When an instruction is sealed, you can perform only the following actions:
1. Remove the Add-On Instruction signature.
2. Create signature history entry.
3. Add-on instruction copy operations (definition, invocations, documentation, signature, signature history).
4. Delete the Add-On Instruction.
5. Overwrite the Add-On Instruction via paste or import.
high nibble
The 4 most significant bits of a byte.
home position
A reference position for all absolute positioning movements usually defined by a home limit switch and encoder marker. It is normally set at power up and retained as long as the control system is operational.
homing
A method of calibrating an axis to a known position. It usually involves moving an axis to a physical position that can be verified with external sensors and inputs. The system then assigns a predefined position to the axis in this position.
homing sequence
Used to specify whether a home limit switch and/or the encoder marker would be used to locate the axis to a known position (when the Homing mode is active). The sequence types can include: immediate setting of position, moving until an external switch is triggered, moving until the motor’s internal marker is triggered, or using both an external switch and then the internal marker.
host name
The host name is the unique name that identifies a computer on a network.
On the Internet, the host name is in the form comp.xyz.net. If there is only one Internet site, the host name is the same as the domain name.
One computer can have more than one host name if it hosts more than one Internet site (for example, home.xyz.net and comp.xyz.net). In that case, home and comp are host names and xyz.net is the domain name.
Valid characters consist of:
  • Numbers in the range of 0…9
  • Alpha characters in the range of A…Z (upper or lower case)
  • dash
  • period
  • No more than 64 valid ASCII characters
  • The first character of the host name must be an alpha character (in the range of A…Z (upper or lower case))
  • The last character of the host name cannot be a period or a dash
  • The host name cannot contain two periods next to each other
Examples of legal host names include:
  • HostName.com
  • HostName
  • HostName.123
  • Host-2-Name.com
  • HostName.DomainName.com
  • Host123Name456.789DomanName000.com
Examples of illegal host names include:
  • .HostName.com
  • HostName.com.
  • HostName..com
  • HostName.com-
  • 123.com
  • 1234567890
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