No LF after CR when dialing?
#11
I re-read your post. ATV1 is not the same as AT*V1, which is the verbose mode.

I experimented for an hour or so with the original WiModem for the C64, WiModem232 V1, WiModem232 V2, and the WiModem232 Pro. I don't ever see a case where a LF is issued when doing the dialing. Anything that actually sends a response code CAN have a LF after the CR, depending on the Hayes command protocol for that particular function. Perhaps you are confusing commands that do not return a response (like dialing) vs. those that do?
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#12
(5 hours ago)admin Wrote: I re-read your post. ATV1 is not the same as AT*V1, which is the verbose mode.

I experimented for an hour or so with the original WiModem for the C64, WiModem232 V1, WiModem232 V2, and the WiModem232 Pro.  I don't ever see a case where a LF is issued when doing the dialing.  Anything that actually sends a response code CAN have a LF after the CR, depending on the Hayes command protocol for that particular function.  Perhaps you are confusing commands that do not return a response (like dialing) vs. those that do?

I am aware that ATV1 and AT*V1 are not the same. In your initial post, you wrote AT*V1 which gives an error on my WiModem232 Pro so I assumed you simply mistyped AT*V1 instead of AT&V1; the latter, of course, is verbose mode. I continued to use AT&V1, or so I thought, from there on. Am I mistaken and there should be an AT*V1?
 
You wrote: "LF is also sent if the modem is in verbose mode (AT*V1)."
 
I wrote: "The modem defaults to ATV1; verbose mode: "
 
I presume we both meant AT&V1 but mistyped and proceeded from there as a common understanding of AT&V1, no?
 
On the LF for no response commands... What I have been typing and meant is that the connect string and/or the no carrier/connect (whatever it is) overwrites the dial command. This is not a behavior that I remember from years ago but, I have been leaving open the possibility that I am misremembering after all of these decades.
 
EDIT: I just checked and it SHOULD be ATV1. If you issue AT&V you will see the V value. It defaults to verbose, a value of 1. To set it, you issue ATV(0 or 1 where 1 is verbose). AT*V1 gives an error and is not listed in AT*HELP. Disclaimer: I am on my way out so this was typed in a rush. There may, or probably will be, errors.
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