Jump to content

Streaming timestamped data to chart, but ignoring gaps in acquisition


Mike Le

Recommended Posts

Kind of a strange situation.

 

There are two parts: the streaming data and displaying the data.

 

The streaming data is picked up from multiple sources. Some "black box" software outputs the data as a waveform array, with absolute timestamp data. The absolute timestamp data is important, because the multiple sources produce data at different times, and the timestamp tells us how the data is aligned.

 

If you throw the timestamped data on a Waveform Chart, it plots perfectly and everything lines up.

 

Now, the enduser has a request. He wants to be able to pause and resume streaming. But he wants different runs to be right next to each other, with no gaps. This is a quick, handy way to do an instant side-by-side comparison of two short data runs.

 

If you just throw the timestamped data onto the chart, then gaps show up whenever you pause. If you paused streaming for 10 seconds, then the gap is 10 seconds long. The pause could be several minutes.

 

So I need to get rid of these gaps in acquisition. I'm struggling with a good way to do that, because the timestamp data is critical in aligning the disparate hardware sources, so I can't just discard it.

 

All the ideas I have are elaborate and involved, requiring shifting all the timestamp data by the length of the pause... but even that's not perfect, because sometimes the data sources will start up several seconds apart. So I think I'd have to look at the trigger time of each signal and check for a >1sec (approx.) delta, then shift that signal back by that amount every time. But then all the subsequent streaming data would also have to be shifted by that same delta...

 

Has anyone had to do anything like this before, or have suggestions for a plan of attack?

 

Thanks guys.

Link to comment

If the User is comparing “runs†then how about an overlay feature.  Display all plots twice (with the second plot having the same colour but being dashed to distinguish it) and provide a single deltaT time shift to the second plot.   This delta can be based on something that defines the start of a “run†or can be User adjustable.

Link to comment

You could use the "Picture Plot" to draw it. If you are heavily dependent on cursors and annotations, then you'd have to handle all that yourself so that may put you off.

 

Another alternative is to have two graph controls side-by-side with their scales hidden and use a Picture Plot function to draw the scale. You won't have to worry about alignment but cursors wont cross the boundaries so you'd have to "fake" it.

 

In a similar vein, you could have two controls, one on top of the other and manipulate the start and maximum scales so that they appear to be contiguous. You may get flicker with this though.

 

With the exception of the first, these are all variations on "don't put them all in one graph", so I expect there are others.

 

We've all gotten used to the in-built features of the graphs so generally we balk at having to write the code to get the features back. This puts many people off the first option but you can do some fantastic graphs with the Picture Plots (gradient shaded limit areas behind the data, anyone?).

Link to comment

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.