12-11-2005 05:22 PM
12-11-2005 08:53 PM
Just curious - where did you read that?
It just ain't so.
VISA manages the serial port and reads characters and passes them on to you. It can be ASCII or UNICODE or binary code of your own making.
Blog for (mostly LabVIEW) programmers: Tips And Tricks
12-11-2005 08:57 PM
The first advice is that "everything seems to go wrong" is not a good enough description of your situation to do anythinng more than guess.
Tell us what happens!
Can you send test data of your own choosing?
What happens when you send a binary 0000000001, for example?
Do you get a number like, say, 256?
Blog for (mostly LabVIEW) programmers: Tips And Tricks
12-12-2005 09:00 AM
12-13-2005 01:45 PM
12-13-2005 02:20 PM
Student81:
For future reference, what was the solution?
Sounds like a pretty cool assignment involving hands on electronics, PIC programming, communication and LabView.
12-15-2005 02:55 AM
Hello!
Sounds like a nice application you have been working on since it involves so many different areas. Why not share it to other people? You have the possibility to share your presentation here:
http://www.ni.com/devzone/dev_exchange/ex_search.htm
Great that everything worked out well for you.
Regards,
Jimmie A.
Applications Engineer, National Instruments
12-18-2005 04:02 PM
09-09-2009 08:09 AM
09-09-2009 08:20 AM
Hi Dustyboy,
Please start a new thread to discuss a solution.
There are some details that you should provide, such as "do you want to implement a static command per button"?
In that new thread, try to provide more dretails about exactly what you are trying to accomplish.
There might be many solutions based on what you are trying to do. THe solution should be simple to implement.
R