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Showing content with the highest reputation on 08/14/2009 in all areas

  1. It's just tu pun together some pics from this topic and little bit more... So we already saw that wires may go diagonally: Then that they may have almost any shape: Michael showed us how execution dots propagates on such wires: Link Sources for creating such wires here. Now I'm getting crazy. Sit down, fasten your seat belts, hold your breatch and watch this. Although it does not run too fast (no more than 10 fps on my computer) but Jing slowed it down even more, so in real everything happens much more smoothly. If you would like to play with this: controls or nodes which have labels are fixed to backgroung. Don't change damping too much. Don't put too much objects on BD. Always wire both inner and outer terminals in tunels. Sources attached. spring-wires.zip
    1 point
  2. Oh no, no, no. Masking tape is much nerdier.
    1 point
  3. A true engineer would use duct tape!!!
    1 point
  4. Get r-undelete or getdataback http://www.runtime.org/ http://www.r-undelete.com/ I have tried both with success.
    1 point
  5. The OpenG LVZIP library also contains a sub library called macbin. In there is a VI MACBIN Open Resource Fork that should allow openening the resource fork of a Macintosch file and use the resulting file refnum with the normal LabVIEW File IO nodes. At least that is how it did work until LV 7.1. Haven't tried that on newer versions. Rolf Kalbermatter
    1 point
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