InnoMedia 6328 Quick Reference Guide
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Copyright © 2016 InnoMedia. All rights reserved.
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Appendix B. Digitmap Usage Rules
Digit map example:
[2-9]11|[1-9]XXX.T|0.T|[2-9]XXXXXX.T|[2-9]XXXXXX.#|1[2-
9]XXXXXXXXX|011X.T|011X.#|*XX.T|*61|*62|*65|*67|*69|*78|*79|***1|101xxxx
The “T” here is critical timeout value.
1.
Digit maps are processed left to right so generally the more specific matches are positioned earlier
in the map and the more general matches are at the end of the digit map.
2.
X is any digit from 0-9
3.
[M-N] specifies any digit from M to N.
4.
Each rule is separated by the vertical bar “|”.
5.
The ‘.’ means it will match zero or more occurrences of the preceding construct, which in this case
is any digit. A dial string that matches will be dialed after a time out of T seconds after the last digit
is entered, “011X.T”. This is the typical international long distance dialing string used in the US. An
example match is: “0114512345678”.
6.
0.T: This will match the digit 0 and, after a time-out of T seconds (defined in the end digit Time-out).
7.
The “T” is what specifies that a time-out will be used to determine when to send the digits. (telnet
command: Cs. Provisioning tag: Digitmap_Critical_Timeout)