06-27-2005 04:41 AM
06-27-2005 07:47 AM
07-25-2005 09:04 AM
You are very right. I am having the same problems as you are. Some of my coworkers think that LV is just a GUI tool and more so.. they think that it's just a prototyping tool. I have tried to convince them that they could make an application as a product, but they prefer to use VB, VC++ etc. I have given up trying to explain to the ignorants... and keep learning new stuff in LV everyday.
07-25-2005 10:27 AM
07-25-2005 11:04 AM
07-25-2005 11:51 AM
I make my living, for the most part, developing applications in LabVIEW (hence my moniker), but I try an stress to my customers that I'm an engineer that happens to "mostly" use LabVIEW for my solutions. I too have run into a lot of C/C++ and VB programmers that make a lot of statements about the failings of LabVIEW vs (fill in the blanks). In fact in a major meeting recently I had a program manager state that "Mr.XXX (a local expert engineer) stated that LabVIEW wasn't very good at ... Well, as a consultant here I wasn't about to challenge this program manager publically, but knowing "Mr. XXX" professionally for many years (probably longer than anyone in the room by about a decade!) and respecting him greatly, I really doubt that he has used LabVIEW more than in a minimally investigative sense. Another engineer here has a hard time resisting telling me about the supposed failings in LabVIEW, but recently admitted that he had tried it (LV) briefly, about 10 years ago! Well I can tell you, today's LabVIEW isn't your father's LabVIEW (for those of you in your 20's ). But essentially, as a previous poster stated, LabVIEW isn't THE solution, it is A solution. It is tending to be a solution more often, as the power of LabVIEW increases, but as in any engineering decisions many factors have to be weighed to decide how to solve the problem, from materials to be used to the tools to mold those materials (LabVIEW). And, as we develop more sophisticated solutions and demonstrate to our associates and management (the "Unbelievers") the power of LabVIEW, then hopefully it will be easier to gain their respect, and hopefully the Big Buck$ !
Keep wiring, it helps a different hemishere of the brain than the text based languages!
P.M.
02-27-2006 02:18 PM
I program mostly in LabVIEW, but I also program in VB, VC++, VB.Net, C#. I have sat in meeting and listen to C++ programmers tell LabVIEW programmers that LabVIEW can't do that, and I calmly say Yes it Can. Then I here LabVIEW programmers tell C++ programmers that C++ can't do that, and I calmly say Yes it Can. There is a lot of ignorance on all sides of programming.
I love LabVIEW for all the typical reason, productivity, supportability, yata yata…, but some times I get tired of wire-working... Next time a C++ programmer demonstrates his/her ignorance of LabVIEW tell him to think of LabVIEW as G++ (or Graphical C++), tell them what you call structures we call clusters, what you call a class we call a vi, what you call a pointer we call a shift register… you get the idea..
Good Day.
02-28-2006 02:09 AM
02-28-2006 04:27 AM - edited 02-28-2006 04:27 AM
Message Edited by davidpcl on 02-28-2006 04:33 AM
02-28-2006 07:55 AM