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Showing content with the highest reputation on 12/19/2017 in all areas

  1. Version 2.0.0

    265 downloads

    Here is the Hooovahh Array VIMs. This initial release contains VIMs for manipulating array data, which are intended to replace OpenG functionality, but with the added benefit of data type propagation, and increased performance using newer array manipulation techniques. In later versions other Array manipulation functions were added moving all the OpenG stuff to their own palette. Version 2.0 changed the suffix naming standard. Updating may mean replacing calls to the new versions since the name on disk has changed. This was for consistency and I'm sorry for breaking compatibility. The added type defs in 2.0 may break compatibility too but these help avoid code breaking bugs since VIMs allowed any data type previously. Most of the OpenG functions are unchanged, but a few use the newer conditional and concatenating tunnels. And a few functions have added performance based on other inputs. For instance the Delete Array Elements can operate in a more efficient way if the input indexes are already sorted. The Filter 1D array can also be more efficient if the input is known to not contain any duplicates. Because these packages contain VIMs, they require LabVIEW 2017 or newer. Having these functions be VIMs mean all functions work with various array data types. Included functions are: Conditional Auto-Indexing Tunnel Delete Elements from (1D or 2D) Array Filter 1D Array Index (1D or 2D) Array, Scalar, Row, Column Remove Duplicates from 1D Array Reorder (1D or 2D) Array Reverse 1D Array Slice 1D Array Sort (1D or 2D) Array Convert 1D to 2D Convert 2D to 1D Find Subarray Force Array Min/Max Size Foreign Key Sort
    1 point
  2. I found this gem! Strange that that isn't the recommended setting in the tutorial. http://digital.ni.com/public.nsf/allkb/4A8B626B55B96C248625796000569FA9
    1 point
  3. I have created a plugin for the Task Manager that can be used from inside an executable, thanks to Michael and his guide to Plug-in Architecture using Packed Project Libraries. If you aren't familiar with PPLs, I'd highly recommend at least a quick glance through this guide. LabVIEW Task Manager Application.zip I took Mike's example and created a plugin that launches the task manager. You can add it to your application as an Easter Egg (set it to load on some secret key combination). You don't have to distribute this plugin with your application, but if you are called to debug something on a deployed system, you can just take this plugin, drop it at the designated place (same as the exe in this example) and enter the key combination to launch it from within the application. To see this in action, launch ..\LabVIEW Task Manager Application\build\testApp.exe. If "LabVIEW Task Manager.lvlibp" exists in the same folder as the exe, your key combination will bring it up.
    1 point
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