USER'S GUIDE____________________________________________________________________
112 _________________________________________________________________ M210796EN-E
PLAY [x] [start_date start_time end_date end_time]
where
x = Number of the data file that will be outputted, range 0 ... 21.
The numbers correspond to the output of the DIR command;
refer to the example on page 110.
Selecting number 0 will output all data files.
start_date = Starting date of the interval to be outputted. Must be given in
the following format: yyyy-mm-dd
start_time = Starting time of the interval to be outputted. Must be given in
the following format: hh:mm:ss
end_date = Ending date of the interval to be outputted. Must be given in
the following format: yyyy-mm-dd
end_time = Ending time of the interval to be outputted. Must be given in
the following format: hh:mm:ss
Example:
>play 3 2007-05-05 00:00:00 2007-05-06 00:00:00
RH (12 min intervals) 2007-05-05 00:00:00 121
Date Time trend min max
yyyy-mm-dd hh:mm:ss %RH %RH %RH
2007-05-05 00:00:00 19.16 18.99 19.33
2007-05-05 00:12:00 19.30 19.09 19.55
2007-05-05 00:24:00 20.01 19.28 21.17
2007-05-05 00:36:00 21.21 20.98 21.44
2007-05-05 00:48:00 19.57 17.72 21.11
2007-05-05 01:00:00 19.09 18.62 19.84
...
The <ESC> key can be used to interrupt the output listing.
NOTE
Output of large amounts of recorded data can result in huge data files and
take a long time, up to several days for the entire memory of the data
logger at 10 second resolution. To make it easier to process the data it is
recommended to select the largest suitable data interval, and to specify
the start and end times carefully.
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