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Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/28/2022 in Posts

  1. And meanwhile, Colonel Kodosky is mulling the future of LabVIEW in his fortified Texas compound...
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  2. Yeah well the thread is labeled debouncing. But this can be used any time you want to be absolutely sure there is a transition in a boolean input. Say in a noisy environment you need to be sure that a transition is actually was that initial input really an edge? How can we be really sure? I did find this reference useful: https://my.eng.utah.edu/~cs5780/debouncing.pdf It shows how different the debounce on switches can be as well.
    1 point
  3. You just had to say it...
    1 point
  4. 1 point
  5. Since Latin for six is "sex", we could have gone for "sexidecimal".
    1 point
  6. I've fixed quite a few bugs and changed the way timestamps are handled, now using JDP Science Common VIs for RFC-3339 You can follow on GitHub
    1 point
  7. In reply to Neil's opening, here's my 2 cents about what I suggest NI should do : From what I read in this thread It seems that NI's NXG dev team was made of people who didn't have enough love for LV-CG- or enough experience using LV-CG for real world applications. Well now that NI's plan is to move forward with LabVIEW, my suggestion is that they make every NXG dev spend 50% of their time contributing on LabVIEW related open source project. There's a lot of great project on GitHub, Bitbucket, GitLab, etc. started by passionate LabVIEW users who have the greatness to share their toolkits, frameworks, API, etc. They have limited resources in most cases, so now that NI has a full team of developers with no real purpose and and not enough understanding of what makes LV-CG great, then let's make them contribute to growing the LV-CG eco-system. edit : if you agree >> https://forums.ni.com/t5/LabVIEW-Idea-Exchange/Make-NXG-dev-team-contribute-to-LV-related-open-source-projects/idi-p/4110996
    1 point
  8. I think there is a compromise here that would help with contending with Python, if it's not too late - make Linux repositories available for older LabVIEW versions. I remember vaguely that there was one for 8.6. So if there were, say, repositories of versions older than 5 years; it would be a route for people to get into LabVIEW and enable makers, students, and the terminally curious to code in LabVIEW without impacting the current sales. But be careful what you wish for. The probable solution to the demands for free stuff will ultimately end up as LabVIEW-as-a-service.
    1 point
  9. What you guys have against auto tool?... I use it all the time with only exception for picking colors (BTW it is ^$**#^#*#$@%$)
    1 point
  10. Auto tool (you're welcome asbo).
    0 points
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