Excerpt from User Manual

 

Introduction

Documentation Conventions

Menu selections are displayed in boldface, for example, Application Programming. A sequence of menu selections is depicted using arrows, such as Applications ® Application Programming ® Create/Update Form Applications. This example means "select Applications, then select Application Programming, then select Create/Update...."

Keys to be pressed are displayed in bold.

Chapters (or Topic references and books) are displayed in italics, for example, Chapter 2, Building a Sample Application. Programming commands are also printed in italics, for example, vmreply.

Procedural steps are numbered. Options or features are bulleted.

"Left-click," "right-click" and "double-click" refer to using a mouse to point and select by depressing the left or right mouse buttons.

"Drag and drop" refers to the technique of using the mouse to move and resize windows, screens, icon palettes, etc. Place the mouse pointer on the outside edge (or, in some cases, the top horizontal bar) of the framed object to be moved, then depress and hold the left mouse button while moving (dragging) the mouse pointer to the new location on the screen. When the mouse button is released, the moved object will remain (dropped) in the new location.

Other Documents in this Series

BIRP also provides three other guides for the UNIX System:

· Getting Started Guide - shows you how to get an NEE application up and running with your telephony system. This guide will allow you to quickly and easily create your first application successfully.

· Installation Manual - contains installation procedures for all three supported versions of the UNIX operating system, as well as Dialogic software installation procedures.

· Command Reference Manual - contains details of NEE commands including IVR, Voice Mail, FAX, Voice Recognition, C-hook routines, CodeBase Database Applications, Credit and Debit Card Applications, and Conferencing Applications. The appendices to the User’s Manual are also located at the end of the Command Reference Manual.

Chapter by Chapter Summary

Chapter 1, Introduction

an overview of this user’s manual, an overview of the NEE system, and definitions of terms.

Chapter 2, Building a Sample Application

contains step-by-step instructions to build your own application with the NEE System. See chapter 2 of the Command Reference Manual for Basic IVR commands and screens.

Chapter 3, NEE Shell

describes the use of the NEE menu-driven operating environment, in which applications are created, maintained, run, and printed. The NEE Setup, Start/Stop, Status, Misc, and Quit menus are explained in this chapter and the AppsGen menu is explained in chapter 4.

Chapter 4, Application Programming

contains an overview of the Applications Generator and discusses how to access the Application Programming screens from the NEE Shell menus.

The Command Reference Manual contains the appendices that are referred to at various points in both manuals:

 

More sample projects | Home | Terms of Use and Disclaimer | Privacy Policy