haalem Posted March 16, 2015 Report Share Posted March 16, 2015 How can I share labview vi with android devices via wireless or other way like this Quote Link to comment
JKSH Posted March 17, 2015 Report Share Posted March 17, 2015 Hi, Your attachment is broken. Can you describe what you mean by "share"? Quote Link to comment
haalem Posted March 18, 2015 Author Report Share Posted March 18, 2015 like this: in mobile I can only see the front panel without control Quote Link to comment
JKSH Posted March 18, 2015 Report Share Posted March 18, 2015 Have a look at Data Dashboard: http://www.ni.com/tutorial/13757/en/ Your picture shows a LabVIEW editor on the mobile phone; that's not possible right now. Quote Link to comment
hooovahh Posted March 18, 2015 Report Share Posted March 18, 2015 Your picture shows a LabVIEW editor on the mobile phone; that's not possible right now. This is true but I have seen developers remote into a PC from a phone and then write code from their phone. Of course that would drive me more crazy than having to use a touch pad for programming but I've seen it done. Quote Link to comment
chris754 Posted March 18, 2015 Report Share Posted March 18, 2015 This is true but I have seen developers remote into a PC from a phone and then write code from their phone. Of course that would drive me more crazy than having to use a touch pad for programming but I've seen it done. Who are these masochists?? I would literally go insane. Do they go a step further and use 3G data to do all this? I have a galaxy note 3 with a pen and I would never attempt such a thing. Quote Link to comment
hooovahh Posted March 18, 2015 Report Share Posted March 18, 2015 Who are these masochists?? It was a very painful thing to watch. We were actually at a movie theater waiting for the show to start and he pulls out his phone and starts coding. The slowest coding you've ever seen. Quote Link to comment
ShaunR Posted March 18, 2015 Report Share Posted March 18, 2015 It was a very painful thing to watch. We were actually at a movie theater waiting for the show to start and he pulls out his phone and starts coding. The slowest coding you've ever seen. In theory, LabVIEW should be pretty good. I know of a couple of web CMSs that you can create web pages by dragging and dropping and people use their mobiles to update their websites. Typing is horrendous, but LV being D&D you would just need a quick way to bring up a condensed palette (no right-click) and rely on the auto-tool (may need some tweaking). I think you could probably come up with a "quick-bar" for the IDE that would make it fairly painless. Of course. If you rely on quick-drop, you'd be stuffed Quote Link to comment
JKSH Posted March 18, 2015 Report Share Posted March 18, 2015 It was a very painful thing to watch. We were actually at a movie theater waiting for the show to start and he pulls out his phone and starts coding. The slowest coding you've ever seen. I... can't decide if I'm impressed or not! I have a galaxy note 3 with a pen and I would never attempt such a thing. I have a Microsoft Surface Pro 2 and I find it a good fit for LabVIEW programming I've done it many times on the bus/train on the way to work. I can install LabVIEW (to open files locally), I have a keyboard (for typing, keyboard shortcuts, and Quick Drop), I have a stylus (for drag+drop, wiring, opening menus, etc.). The stylus is as fast as a mouse. Pen-tap = Left-click, Pen-button+Pen-tap = Right-click. It has an active digitizer, so hovering the pen across the screen moves the cursor (like moving the mouse). In contrast, dragging the pen tip across the screen is like dragging the mouse. The one thing it doesn't fully replace is the mouse wheel, but I have Ctrl+Shift+Drag for scrolling the FP/BD. I've always found mouse-wheel too slow for scrolling FP arrays so I don't use it anyway. Quote Link to comment
AlexandrKonoval Posted April 8, 2015 Report Share Posted April 8, 2015 I recomend you to look at the TeamViewer or the SW with the same functionality.Also, there are a lot of app-in-cloud services, so you can rent the server, install your LabVIEW and then use it from any device.The last thing is theoretically. Didn`t try to do this. Quote Link to comment
Neil Pate Posted April 8, 2015 Report Share Posted April 8, 2015 I have a Microsoft Surface Pro 2 and I find it a good fit for LabVIEW programming This is quite interesting. I really hate doing any real programming on my laptop using the touchpad (on a flight for example). Sounds like the Surface solves this problem! Quote Link to comment
Wezarp Posted September 20, 2015 Report Share Posted September 20, 2015 Hi all, It seems that what you want to do is solved using Wezarp! Have a look on our website www.wezarp.com Insert the Wezarp Server VI into your diagram. Install Wezarp for Android on your mobile device (Windows and iOS is also available). Set the IP address...that's all Best regards Jeff Quote Link to comment
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