Absolutely it was true. The printer could release the Mux channel while it 
advanced the carriage. This was the old days. Not a lot of intelligence in a 
printer.

Charles


-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Paul Gilmartin
Sent: Monday, April 27, 2020 7:15 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: C

On Tue, 28 Apr 2020 11:47:23 +1000, Wayne Bickerdike wrote:

>Doesn't seem right to me. If we're takling ANSI carriage control.
>
I think they're talking MVT COBOL syntax.

>0 - move double
>blank - move single
>+ - no LF
>1 - Skip to next page (Channel 1)
>
>We always used machine code characters because they didn't have to be
>immediate whereas ANSI were immediate. The reasoning was that it was faster
>to perform the print action and then do the carriage move to the next line
>or channel. In the days of the 1403 line printer.
> 
Is that a guess, or did someone actually perform measurements?

I would hope that a well-designed printer driver would optimize channel
programs as it converted from ANSI to CCWs.  The controller always
performs spacing after printing.

-- gil

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