Action Keywords
An action is defined as a keyword that identifies the action type, always followed by one or more parameters and sometimes the equal (assignment) operator.
Every keyword uses a specific syntax that interprets parameters according to its own rules.
System Keywords
DATESET
Set the HSYCO Server’s system clock.
Action | Description |
---|---|
DATESET = datetime | set the HSYCO Server operating system’s clock and hardware clock |
Parameters:
- datetime - date and time formatted as "YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss" or "YYYYMMDDhhmmss", in the local time zone
Examples:
DATESET "2014-10-31 20:00:00"
DATESET "20141031200000"
HAACTIVE
Force a master HSYCO server to become inactive, or return to the active state.
Action | Description |
---|---|
HAACTIVE = FALSE | force a master to become inactive (has no effect on the slave system) |
HAACTIVE = TRUE | used after the master was forced to become inactive, returns it to the active state (has no effect on the slave system) |
Parameters:
- active - true or false
Examples:
IO mygate.connection = offline : HAACTIVE = false
NLP
Send a text to the Natural Language Processor (NLP). See the NLP engine page for additional information.
Action | Description |
---|---|
NLP area = text | the text string is passed to the NLP for processing and to execute the corresponding actions if a match is found. Area can be either one of the area IDs defined in the NLP dictionary files, or a text string that will be matched against the defined areas |
Parameters:
- text - natural language text string
Examples:
NLP = "turn on the kitchen lights"
POWER
Sets the electric power state variable.
The power value is shown in the navigation or status bar of the Web interface.
Besides setting the power value, this method also triggers the execution of the powerEvent() callback and the POWER event in EVENTS.
Action | Description |
---|---|
POWER = power | sets the electric power state variable to a specific value, in Watts |
Parameters:
- power - the power in Watt units.
Examples:
POWER = IO meter.power
PROGRAMTIMER
Creates or deletes a program timer.
Action | Description |
---|---|
PROGRAMTIMER name = SET seconds | a program timer will be executed after the number of seconds specified in SET. If a program timer with the same name has already been set, the action will be ignored |
PROGRAMTIMER name = CLEAR | deletes a timer |
PROGRAMTIMER name = RESET seconds | similar to SET, but if a program timer with the same name has already been set, the timer settings will be changed to the new timeout |
PROGRAMTIMER name = REPEAT seconds | sets a program timer that is executed repeatedly with an interval equal to the specified number of seconds |
Parameters:
- name - the program timer name
- seconds - the timeout, in seconds.
If the program timer name starts with $, then the server will also automatically set a variable, with a name equal to the program timer's name, to the remaining number of seconds. Note that the variable is not guarateed to be updated at every second, as some updates may be skipped due to timing constraints.
Examples:
IO knx.1/2/3 = 1 : PROGRAMTIMER presence = REPEAT 3600
IO knx.1/2/3 = 0 : PROGRAMTIMER presence = CLEAR
WAIT
Pauses before the execution of the next action.
Action | Description |
---|---|
WAIT = s | causes a pause in the execution of actions for the specified number of seconds. It can be also set in decimal format |
Parameters:
- s - wait time in seconds
Examples:
WAIT = 5
WAIT = 0.3
Cameras
CAMERA
The CAMERA action is used to temporarily disable cameras’ live view and recording features.
Action | Description |
---|---|
CAMERA name = ON | live view enabled |
CAMERA name = OFF | live view and recording disabled |
CAMERA name = RECON | recording enabled |
CAMERA name = RECOFF | recording disabled |
Parameters:
- name - the camera’s id. You can specify a list of space separated ids.
Examples:
- CAMERA entrance = ON
CAMERAREC
Records video from a camera.
Action | Description |
---|---|
CAMERAREC name = sec | records for the number of seconds defined with the set attribute |
Parameters:
- name - the camera’s id. You can specify a list of space separated ids
- sec - recording time in seconds. If set to 0, stop the current recording and reset the recording markers, so that the next recording will always show as a distinct record in a camera panel object, even when the interval between two successive recordings is short.
Examples:
CAMERAREC openspace = 30
CAMERARECFULL
Records video from a camera, like CAMERAREC, but ignores the DroppedFrames parameter in hsyco.ini, so that all frames captured from the camera during the recording period are recorded with no skips.
Action | Description |
---|---|
CAMERARECFULL name = sec | records for the number of seconds defined with the set attribute |
Parameters:
- name - the camera’s id. You can specify a list of space separated ids
- sec - recording time in seconds. If set to 0, stop the current recording and reset the recording markers, so that the next recording will always show as a distinct record in a camera panel object, even when the interval between two successive recordings is short.
Examples:
CAMERARECFULL openspace = 30
Data Logger
Data loggers collect and display statistical data on the variation of a specified value.
They can be used to automatically generate trend charts and log the data as CSV files.
See the Data Logger documentation for additional information.
DATALOGGER
Updates and performs operations on a data logger.
Action | Description |
---|---|
DATALOGGER name = value | Supplies the data logger with a new value to be processed. It will also trigger the refresh procedure |
DATALOGGER name = CLEAR | Clears the data gathered in the data logger |
DATALOGGER name = ERROR | Used with counter data loggers, resets the internal delta baseline |
DATALOGGER name = FILE LOG filename | Appends the last acquired value to the specified file (filename) using the CSV format. |
DATALOGGER name = FILE LOG filename TIMESTAMP | Appends the last acquired value to the specified file (filename) using the CSV format. The timestamp of the record will be reported too |
DATALOGGER name = FILE STAT filename | Creates or updates the specified file (filename) with the currently gathered data using the CSV format |
DATALOGGER name = FILE CSVWRITE path | Writes a raw dump of all data from a data logger into a CSV file. The file, named <data logger id>.csv is written in the < path> directory |
DATALOGGER name = FILE CSVWRITE FROM yyyymmddhhmm TO yyyymmddhhmm GROUPBY year | month | day | hour PATH path | Writes a raw dump of data from a data logger into a CSV file, between the given time interval. The file, named <data logger id>.csv is written in the < path> directory. The date and time must be written as a 12 digit string. Data returned including the first time and excluding the second. The "TO" limit is optional. "GROUPBY" is also optional. If omitted, all individual records matching the time interval are written to the CSV file. If "GROUPBY" is specified, records and their values are grouped together by year, month, day or hour. Note that, to optimise performance and resources allocation, this extended form of the FILE CSVWRITE action can write only up to 10000 rows to the CSV file |
DATALOGGER name = FILE CSVREAD path | Upload a CSV file to insert, update or delete records of a data logger. The file, named <data logger id>.csv, is read from the < path> directory |
DATALOGGER name = FILE CSVREADOVER path | Upload a CSV file that will replace all records of a data logger |
Parameters:
- name - identifier of the data logger. It is possible to use a list of names separated by spaces to address several data loggers. Variables can be used
- filename - the file pathname. You can use multiple distinct strings, including variables, that will be concatenated to create the file name.
Examples:
$value : DATALOGGER energy = $value,
DATALOGGER energy = FILE LOG userdata/energylog.csv TIMESTAMP,
DATALOGGER energy = FILE STAT userdata/energystat.csv
TIME : DATALOGGER temperature = IO ste.1
TIME : DATALOGGER humidity = IO ste.2
Example of code to export and import a data logger called "loggermem" (path: "logger", data logger id: "loggermem")
user dataimport : DATALOGGER loggermem = FILE CSVREADOVER "logger"
user dataexport : DATALOGGER loggermem = FILE CSVWRITE "logger"
user dataexport : DATALOGGER loggermem = FILE CSVWRITE FROM "201801010000" TO "202101010000" GROUPBY "month" PATH "logger"
CSV Import/Export Examples
Using the HSYCO's development API, in Events, JavaScript and Java, you can export a full dump of all data underlying each data logger.
The CSV file uses \r\n as line separator and ';' as field separator.
This is an example of the CSV file for a counter data logger.
ts;delta;cost;locked
20160129130000;2.0830569986031082;0.0;1
20160129140000;3.464736775902562;0.0;1
20160129150000;0.04146936782360733;0.0;1
20160220120100;0.005090918751661816;0.0;0
20160220120200;0.039745587753242655;0.0;0
The record format has the following four fields:
- ts: the timestamp as YYYYMMDDhhmmss
- delta: a double precision floating point of the accumulated values for the period between this record's timestamp and the next
- cost: a double precision floating point of the cost value for the period
- locked: a boolean, represented as 1 for locked records, and 0 for unlocked records. A record is marked as locked when its cost value is permanently set, and will not change if the rates rules are changed in the future.
This is an example of the CSV file for a range data logger.
ts;vmin;vmax;vavg;vcount
20170114150100;3.607471109385042;4.694435324229342;4.241931611566256;15
20170114150200;3.8066206378643987;5.446351986025894;4.575574507553171;16
20170114150300;2.398800160049782;5.2533792997638775;3.6368449963207854;17
20170114150400;1.5474068317929874;3.1531099637853406;2.290833667227986;10
The record format has the following four fields:
- ts: the timestamp as YYYYMMDDhhmmss
- vmin: a double precision floating point for the minimum value logged in the period
- vmax: a double precision floating point for the maximum value logged in the period
- vavg: a double precision floating point for the average value logged in the period
- vcount: a positive integer counter of the number of values logged in the period; this is used to compute a weighted average when new values are passed to the data logger.
Export API
Use the following event action to create a CSV file for a data logger. The file, named <data logger id>.csv
is written in the <path>
directory:
DATALOGGER name = FILE CSVWRITE path
You can also use the equivalent JavaScript command API:
dataLoggerSave("csvwrite", names, path, timestamp)
And the Java command API (setting action to "csvwrite"):
static boolean dataLoggerSave(String action, String[] names, String path, boolean timestamp)
Import API
Raw data, using the same CSV format of the export APIs, can be imported to a data logger.
You can selectively update existing records, delete records, but also completely wipe existing data and replace them with the data from a the CSV file or a string. To delete records, leave just the timestamp value in the CSV file for the records you want to delete, for example:
ts;vmin;vmax;vavg;vcount
20170114150200;3.8066206378643987;5.446351986025894;4.575574507553171;16
20170114150300
20170114150400
This file will update record with update the values of one record, and delete two records.
Note that the first record in the CSV file is assumed to be the header, and not considered as valid data.
At the end of the import process, one or two files are generated, with the same name of the import file, with the "-ok" and "-err" suffixes to the data logger id, before the .csv extension. The ok file contains a copy of all records that have been successfully processed, while the err file will contain all records that were discarded due to format errors or other error conditions. If no errors are detected, only the ok file is created during the import process.
Use the following event action to upload a CSV file to insert, update or delete records of a data logger. The file, named <data logger id>.csv
, is read from the < path>
directory:
DATALOGGER name = FILE CSVREAD path
Use the following event action to upload a CSV file that will replace all records of a data logger:
DATALOGGER name = FILE CSVREADOVER path
You can upload a CSV line directly from a string instead of from a file, just replace the file path with the complete CSV string:
DATALOGGER name = FILE CSVREAD "20170114150200;3.8066206378643987;5.446351986025894;4.575574507553171;16"
DATALOGGER name = FILE CSVREAD "20170114150300"
You can also use the equivalent JavaScript command API:
dataLoggerSave("csvread", names, path, timestamp)
dataLoggerSave("csvreadover", names, path, timestamp)
And the Java command API (setting action to "csvread" or "csvreadover"):
static boolean dataLoggerSave(String action, String[] names, String path, boolean timestamp)
DMX
DMX
Controls the value of DMX-512 channels.
Action | Description |
---|---|
DMX address = ON | sets the DMX address to the value preceding the last OFF command |
DMX address = OFF | sets the DMX address to value = 0 |
DMX address = FLIP | flips the status of a DMX channel (if the status is ON it executes the OFF command and vice versa). When more channels are specified, if the previous status of at least one of the channels is different from OFF, the OFF command will be sent to all the channels, otherwise the ON command will be sent |
DMX address = value | assigns a value to the DMX channel. Valid values are numbers between 0 and 255 |
DMX addressX = DMX addressY | the DMX channel addressX assumes the current status of the DMX channel addressY |
DMX address = MERGE | the channel or channels on the DMX OUT bus of the gateway follow the same channels of the DMX IN bus |
DMX address = UNMERGE | disables merge mode |
Parameters:
- address - when using one DMX gateway, address will be a standard DMX-512 address between 1 and 512. If there is more than one gateway, 1000 must be added to the DMX address for the second gateway, 2000 for the third one and so on. For example, 2100 stands for the address 100 on the DMX bus controlled by the third gateway. You can also use a from-to range format to specify a contiguous block of channels.
Examples:
DMX 100 101 102 = ON
DMX 100-120 200-220 = DMX 40
DMX 33 = MERGE
Infrared Control
IR
Sends a command to an IRTrans.
Action | Description |
---|---|
IR name = command | the IR code must be in the local IRTrans FLASH memory database or, If the hsyco/ir directory contains a .ccfhex file corresponding to the database name, then the CCF string in that file is used instead of sending the command stored in the IRTrans internal database |
Parameters:
- name - identifies the IRTrans, as defined with the IRTrans parameter in hsyco.ini
- command - the command format is remote.command; that is the remote control database name followed by a dot and the command name.
Examples:
IR theater = dvd.play
I/O Servers
IO
Writes to I/O servers data points.
Action | Description |
---|---|
IO name = value | sets the data point to a value. Values are specific to the type of I/O server |
IO name = FLIP | inverts the output of the I/O data point. If the status of the output is 0 the new status will be 1, if different from 0 the new status will be 0 |
IO name1 = IO name2 | sets the I/O interface output name1 to the current value of the I/O interface name2 |
Parameters:
- name - the server id, followed by a single dot and the data point suffix. The EVENTS interpreter converts data points names to lower case
- value - you can use multiple unquoted words, quoted strings and variables, that will be appended to the value string.
Examples:
IO contacts.c1 contacts.c3 = 1
IO sensors.c1 = FLIP
IO contacts.o1 contacts.o2 = IO sensors.flood
Leak Detector
The Intelligent Leak Detector is used to generate warning for potential water or other quantities leaks by analyzing any generic flow counter.
The detector should be called at regular intervals, possibly faster than the minimum time needed for the counter to increment its value by one.
It will generate a leak warning when the measured flow remains relatively constant over a certain amount of time.
Use this function at your own risk!
The Intelligent Leak Detector uses a correlation algorithm to distinguish between a constant flow and an irregular flow. A relatively constant flow over a certain amount of time is considered as a potential leak and generates a leak event.
In some conditions, also depending on the type of flow counter used, this algorithm could fail from properly and timely recognizing a real leak, or it could generate false leak warnings.
Use different names to implement multiple independent leak detectors.
LEAK
Controls the integrated leak detector.
The detector’s logic uses two parameters to set its sensitivity and time base.
The detector generates a warning if the flow deviation constantly remains below the deviation threshold for the time period.
You can change the defaults to adapt to your specific conditions.
Action | Description |
---|---|
LEAK name = value | calls the leak detector passing the current liters counter value. Using variables or references to IO data points is supported |
LEAK name = PERIOD t | changes the time base. The default is 1200 seconds. Set the period to 0 to temporarily disable the detector. The time base can be changed anytime, even when the detector is already processing data |
LEAK name = DEVIATION d | changes the deviation percentage. d should be a number between 1 and 100. The default is 50. Set the deviation to 0 to temporarily disable the detector. Lower values cause the algorithm to activate leak warnings only when the flow is very constant in time, becoming less susceptible to false alarms, but a value that is too low could miss actual leaks. Higher values could easily generate false alarms. The deviation can be changed anytime |
LEAK name = CLEAR | clears the detector’s internal state. In normal applications, there is no need to call this function, as the detector automatically clears its state from old data |
Parameters:
- name - the name of a leak detector. Using different names you can implement several independent leak detectors
- t - time base
- d - deviation percentage
Examples:
HSYCOSTART : PROGRAMTIMER modbusread = repeat 4
PROGRAMTIMER modbusread : IO modbus.2.768 = readholdingregisters:uint, LEAK water = IO modbus.2.768
LEAK water = ON : MAIL "john@example.com" = "hsyco@example.com" "Urgent Message from HSYCO" "Leak Detected"
LEAK water = OFF : MAIL "john@example.com" = "hsyco@example.com" "Message from HSYCO" "Leak Reset"
Log
FILELOG
Appends a generic text message at the end of a file.
Action | Description |
---|---|
FILELOG filename = text | you can use multiple unquoted words, quoted strings and variables, that will be appended at the last line of the text file |
Parameters:
- filename - the file name. You can specify any path, starting from HSYCO’s base directory. If the file or parent directories don’t exist, they will be created automatically. The filename parameter can be a variable
- text - the message that will be appended at the last line of the text file.
Examples:
HSYCOSTART : FILELOG logs/mylog.txt = "log message example"
LOG
Generates an information message in the daily log file.
Action | Description |
---|---|
LOG = text | you can use multiple unquoted words, quoted strings and variables, that will be appended to the log message |
Parameters:
- text - the log message
- from - the sender e-mail address.
Examples:
LOG = "log message example"
LOG = "Time: " $TIME:H-M-S$ " DATE: " $DATE:D/M/Y$
Mail
MAIL
Sends an email message.
HSYCO SERVER sends the mail either directly to the recipient’s domain mail server if the SmtpName parameter is not defined in hsyco.ini, or using a specific email account with user authentication and traffic encryption if the SMTP server and account parameters are set.
If the email message is sent directly to the recipient’s domain mail server, you need to ensure that the mail server accepts mail to the destination address being sent with the from address and the public IP of the HSYCO SERVER.
HSYCO does not automatically retry sending the message if the destination mail server is not available when the send mail function is called.
Action | Description |
---|---|
MAIL to = from subject body | sends text and camera images. The body part of the mail is the last attribute. You can email the same message to multiple recipients |
Parameters:
- to - the recipient address. It is possible to send the same email to a space separated list of email addresses. You can optionally specify the destination SMTP server name or IP address by appending :server name or address to the recipient's email address, for example: john@example.com:192.168.1.1
- from - the sender e-mail address
- subject - a quoted string or variable with the message object
- body - the message body. To send an ordinary text, just enter a quoted text string. To send an image, append strings with the following format:
cam:cameraname[:seconds_back[:frames_back]]
. For example, “cam:camera1” sends a live frame from the camera called “camera1”;cam:camera1:0
sends the last recorded frame;cam:camera1:2
sends a frame that was recorded two seconds before the last recorded frame andcam:camera1:2:5
sends a frame that is 5 frames earlier than the one recorded two seconds before the last recording. To send files as attachments, use the following format: “file:file name”. The file path is relative to the HSYCO root directory.
Examples:
In this example, we send a message every minute, with the measured power load, to two email addresses:
TIME : $BODY = "Energy consumption for " $DATE:y/m/d$ " at " $TIME:h:m:s$ " is " $power$ " Watt"
$BODY : MAIL email1@hsyco.com email2@hsyco.com = hsyco@hsyco.net `Sent from HSYCO` $BODY
40 seconds after the alarm event, an email from the address hsyco@hsyco.net is sent to emal1@hsyco.com, with three images attached: the first is a real time image, the second is the last recorded image, the third one is the frame that was recorded 15 seconds before:
user "security" = "alarm" : CAMERAREC entrance = 30, PROGRAMTIMER rec = 40
PROGRAMTIMER rec : MAIL email1@hsyco.com = hsyco@hsyco.net `Sent from HSYCO` `Camera entrance` `cam:entrance` `cam:entrance:0` `cam:entrance:15`
At midnight, we are sending the energy.csv file in the data sub-directory as an attachment:
TIME = 0000: MAIL email1@hsyco.com = hsyco@hsyco.net "Sent from HSYCO” "Energy daily report." file:data/energy.csv
Network Services
PING
Tests the reachability of one or more hosts, identified by their hostnames or IP addresses, within the optional timeout defined in milliseconds (or using a default timeout of 200 ms).
This test generates PING events like PING hostname = ON if the host is reachable, or PING hostname = OFF if not reachable.
Action | Description |
---|---|
PING hostname | test the reachability of hostname, with 200ms response time-out |
PING hostname = time | test the reachability of hostname, with a specific response time-out |
Parameters:
- hostname - the IP device name or IP address
- time - response time-out, in milliseconds.
Examples:
TIME : PING 192.168.1.1
TIME : PING 192.168.1.200 192.168.1.201 = 1000
URL
Sends a GET or POST HTTP or HTTPS request to the specified url.
The HTTP basic or digest access authentication methods are supported.
Responses can be checked using the corresponding URL event.
Action | Description |
---|---|
URL GET "url" | sends a GET request without authentication |
URL GET "user:password" "url" | sends a GET request with authentication |
URL POST "url" "content_type" "data" | sends a POST request without authentication |
URL POST "user:password" "url" "content_type" "data" | sends a POST request with authentication |
Parameters:
- url - a full url, including the mandatory http:// or https:// query scheme and optional query string
- user:password - user and password for basic or digest access authentication
- content_type - the MIME type descriptor for the POST data
- data - the POST data (HTTP message body) sent with the request, encoded according to the content_type parameter (usually application/x-www-form-urlencoded for POST messages)
Examples:
HSYCOSTART: URL POST "http://10.0.0.5/cgi-bin/cmd.sh" "text/xml" "%3C%3Fxml%20version%3D%22..."
TIME 0800: URL GET "usr1:qi3qw" "http://10.0.0.5/cgi-bin/cmd.sh?id=relay1"
URL "http://10.0.0.5/cgi-bin/cmd.sh?id=relay1" : LOG = "relay opened"
Public Announcement
AUDIO
See the Audio and Public Announcement documentation.
The AUDIO action is used to play text-to-speech messages or recorded audio files.
Audio can be sent to the Web browser, the server’s audio line out connector, the internal speaker or audio out line of Axis cameras, SNOM's phones or PA devices, and I/O servers with audio playback capabilities.
Action | Description |
---|---|
AUDIO to = FILE filename | plays a pre-recorded audio file |
AUDIO to = VOICE:voicename message | converts a text message to speech and plays the audio |
Parameters:
- to - the audio destination (see table below)
- filename - the pathname of the audio file, relative to the HSYCO’s main directory
- voicename - the voice name for the text-to-speech engine; see the [[Audio and Public Announcement]] section for additional information
- message - the text message for text-to-speech conversion; you can use multiple strings that will be automatically appended.
Examples:
The gong.mp3 audio file is played every minute through the server’s audio line out or internal speaker:
TIME : audio speaker = file "audio/gong.mp3"
Same as above, but played at the same time on all phones registered to the 239.255.255.245 multicast address and port 5555:
TIME : audio snom@239.255.255.245:5555 = file "audio/gong.mp3"
Same as above, but played to the Axis camera with id cam1
:
TIME : audio axis@cam1 = file "audio/gong.mp3"
Converts a text message to speech using the en
voice of the text-to-speech engine, and play the audio on an Axis camera:
TIME : audio axis@cam1 = "voice:en" “the time is “ $time:h:m$
Same as above, but played by web browser with Acapela "Ryan" voice:
TIME : audio web = "voice:ryan22k" "the time is " $time:h:m$
Serial Communication Ports
COMM
Sends a sequence of bytes to the specified communication port.
Action | Description |
---|---|
COMM name = hexbytes | sends bytes to a serial port |
If both verboseLog and userLog are set to true, the full trace of sent bytes is written to the log file.
Parameters:
- name - the name of the communications port, as defined in the CommPorts parameter in hsyco.ini
- hexbytes - string with the hexadecimal representation of the sequence of bytes to be sent. You can use multiple unquoted words, quoted strings and variables, that will be appended to generate the byte stream sent to the communication port.
Examples:
COMM serialport = FE03C9104B27
COMM serialport = FE $body 27
Timers and Schedulers
USERTIMERSET
Sets a user timer.
Action | Description |
---|---|
USERTIMERSET timerid = on hour minute duration days | set the user timer |
Parameters:
- on - true enables the timer; false disables the timer; null or empty string leaves the mode unchanged
- hour - start hour, from 0 to 23; null or empty string leaves the start hour unchanged
- minute - start minute, from 0 to 59; null or empty string leaves the start minute unchanged
- duration - duration in minutes, from 0 to 1439; null or empty string leaves the duration unchanged
- days - activation days, as a string of up to 7 characters from 1 to 7, 1 is Monday, 7 is Sunday; null or empty string leaves the days unchanged.
Examples:
USERTIMERSET t1 = TRUE 11 50 null 67
enables timer "t1", setting the start time at 11:50, Saturday and Sunday, leaving the duration unchanged.
User Interface
UISESSIONSET
Changes the dynamic attributes of an identified GUI object, just like UISET, but only affects the client session that generated the event that triggered this action.
UISESSIONSET can only be used with PAGE and USER events, and will override settings made with UISET.
Action | Description |
---|---|
UISESSIONSET id.attr = value | id is the unique name that identifies the object, specified in the index.hsm file with the extension !id after the object type |
Parameters:
- id - object id
- attr - attribute name
- value - attribute value. You can use multiple unquoted words, quoted strings and variables, that will be appended to form the value parameter.
Examples:
USER mybutton = 1 : UISESSIONSET mytext.italic = true
UISET
Changes the dynamic attributes of an identified GUI object.
Action | Description |
---|---|
UISET id.attr = value | id is the unique name that identifies the object, specified in the index.hsm file with the extension !id after the object type |
Parameters:
- id - object id. You can also target all objects of a type by specifying as id
(<object's type>)
(e.g. "UISET (user).fontweight = bold" will target all user objects) - attr - attribute name
- value - attribute value. You can use multiple unquoted words, quoted strings and variables, that will be appended to form the value parameter.
Examples:
UISET mytext.italic = true
UISET mychart.barcolor =”#000000”
USER
Triggers a USER event and the userCommand(String name, String param) Java method and JavaScript function.
Can be used like a function call in EVENTS, and as a calling mechanism between EVENTS, JavaScript and Java.
Action | Description |
---|---|
USER name = param | executes the userCommand(name, param) Java method and JavaScript function, and the USER name = param event. Either name or param can be omitted, and will be passed as empty strings, but not both |
Parameters:
- name - passed as the name parameter to USER and userCommand(). You can use multiple unquoted words, quoted strings and variables, that will be appended to form the name parameter
- param - passed as the param parameter to USER and userCommand(). You can use multiple unquoted words, quoted strings and variables, that will be appended to form the param parameter.
Examples:
USER hometheater = "on"
USER hometheater = "changed" $newvalue