Terminal Translates Letters into Numbers When Auto DialingLast reviewed: November 23, 1994Article ID: Q86492 |
The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARYTerminal will automatically substitute letters with numbers when you choose the Dial command from the Phone menu. This feature may be desirable when you dial a phone number that includes letters, but does not allow "AT" commands to be sent when auto dialing.
MORE INFORMATIONIf letters are included in the Phone Number setting in Terminal (TERMINAL.EXE), they will be replaced by the corresponding numbers found on a traditional touch-tone phone dialing pad. Terminal is a modem communications program included with Windows 3.0, 3.0a, and 3.1. In some cases, it may be desirable to insert "AT" modem commands into the dialing string to activate certain features of a Hayes or Hayes compatible modem when dialing. With Terminal, these letters are transformed into numbers.
Steps to Reproduce Problem
Dialing:ATV1,555-1212However, Terminal will actually dial "2881,555-1212" instead because "2" corresponds to "A" and "8" corresponds to the letters "T" and "V". For letters that do not have a corresponding letter on the phone pad (Q and Z), Terminal substitutes a dash for the letter when it sends the dialing string to the modem. Dashes are ignored by the modem. To send AT commands to the modem while dialing:
ABC=2 DEF=3 GHI=4 JKL=5 MNO=6 PRS=7 TUV=8 WXY=9 |
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