Hello, that's my doubt, I've been testing but I haven't found any example.
I am referring to this library.
Thank you.
I am referring to this library.
Thank you.
To quote Erel in post 27 of the library
So what did you do so far?
What I mean is that if you cannot address and print via blue-tooth to your printer from a non-b4x app, then you have a printer installation problem that had to be fixed prior before you ever can use a B4X application which should print via blue-tooth to your printer.
The specification with Paperang P1 indicate a wireless and not a blue-tooth connection.
I see the specifications that it supports Bluetooth 4.0 meaning it may be using Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE). Search this forum for BLE Print.For example for Paperang P1 ther is his app provided from factory
Venico printers have always been difficult to get up and running without any problems. A first tip if something does not go as you expect, you should first turn off the printer, then wait a while and then turn it on again. In this way, the printer (re)starts in the default setting and you overrule any incorrect settings.
I understand from the web site that it seems that the printer is initially only usable in China only or only outside China. The question is whether you were able to activate the printer via the app on the phone and whether you can then communicate on that phone via bluethoot. As long as that has not been successful, you can never connect via the B4X app.
View attachment 142607
I started the line with de name of the poster of the first question.??What mean 'Venico printers..' ?
If you tried out some code examples in this forum, I believe you will be able to see the data received in B4A logs. Have you tried the example I attached in the link I share above and read the whole thread? There are some apps that you can also download to test BLE peripherals.As far as I know, there is no 'debug' mode or anything like that that allows me to understand what the printer 'sees' when I send text strings