4 - 6 IMAGETEAM™ 4410/4710 User’s GuideNote: Note:If using Quick*View to program, use thespace bar to designate a space and not the hex value of 20.5. Exit OCR Template EditorScanSave OCR Template to save your entries.Discard OCR Templateexits without saving any OCR Template changes.Stringing Together Multiple Formats(Creating “Or” Statements)You may want to program the scanner to accept many OCR formats. To do this,you would string together each format with a “t.” This tells the scanner to readoptical characters that match any one of the formats in the template.Example D: You need to read any combination of 8 digits,or a combinationof 4 digits, 2 uppercase letters, and 2 digits. The template would be:ddddddddtddddllddTo create this template, you would scan theEnter OCR Template symbol(page 4-9), scan thed from the OCR Programming Chart after the SampleCodes in the back of this manual 8 times, then scan thet to create the “or”statement. Then you would scan the characters for the 2nd template. Scanthed 4 times, scanl 2 times, then scand 2 more times. ScanSave OCRTemplate (page 4-9). This would let you read either type of format, forexample:99028650or9902XZ50You can string together as many templates as you need.Creating a User-Defined VariableYou can create up to two of your own user variables for an OCR template. Thesevariables will represent any OCR readable characters. The user-definedvariables are stored under the letters “g” and “h.” Creating a user variable followsthe same steps as creating a template, but instead of scanning theEnter OCRTemplate symbol, you scan theEnter User-Defined Variable symbol (page 4-9). The letters g and h can then be used in an OCR template to define thevariable you specified.