The Light Pen is designed to be used with the CRT Display Type 30. By "writing" on the face of the CRT, stored or displayed information can be expanded, deleted or modified. Specifically, each time a light-pulse strikes the pen, the Light Pen status bit is set to one (see definition of Check Status Instruction) and Program Flag 3 is set to one. At the time the status bit is set, the x-y coordinates of the -point just "seen" by the pen are in bits 0 through 9 of the AC and bits 0 through 9 of the 10, respectively (if the Display Instruction was given with the optional in-out wait). A program designed to accept Light Pen input would periodically check the Light Pen status bit and when found to be set, would store the C (AC) and C (10) thereby defining the point just "seen" by the pen.
Architectural Evolution in DEC’s 18-Bit Computers, by Bob Supnik, February 2016 will provide an overview. Catch is he is showing the steps forward from PDP-1 to PDP-4 and you would have to reverse this conversion process.
Regards,
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