08-11-2009 12:12 PM
kmcdevitt wrote:....At worst this is a lie. At best this is an untruth. It is not a one-off decision. It has become a pattern. You did it with Trace Execution Toolkit. You're doing it now with Math Script. And you'll be doing it in the future with other toolkits and modules. Why not just be honest and upfront about it.Kevin.
Since when was the execution trace toolkit ever part of either the base, full, or pro versions of LabVIEW?
08-11-2009 12:32 PM
Seriously where is the documentation? There is NONE! I tried the parallel for loop and one of the loops that the wizard Identified as a "green light" had a bunch of shift registers, and the data was corrupted by the parallel process. No run arrows were broken or any indication that this was not a viable implementation. Just bad data. So my question is this:
Where can I find the documentation on how this feature is supposed to work? What happens when you use a shift register? I need more than the one paragraph help screen that doesn't explain much!
08-11-2009 12:42 PM
I have trouble giving much credence to the "we didn't know who was using it" argument.
Wouldn't a form while registering cleared that up for you?
This way you're making us pay so that you can find out where your market is. That's not a very friendly way of doing market research.
Shane.
08-11-2009 12:46 PM
Jeffrey P wrote:
We definitely considered an automatic grandfathering clause. The problem here is that then everybody would recieve the updated software, and we would be back to not knowing who is actually using MathScript. With this approach, we have a clear definition of which LabVIEW users are using MathScript, and gives us the outlet to work with you for new features, what features (or lack of features) are roadbumps for you, and how we can ultimately make the experience better. Automatically grandfathering everyone would only delay this conversation until a year from now.
08-11-2009 12:49 PM
Kevin,
I really appreciate your taking the time to provide feedback. I know it sometimes may seem futile, but believe me, I hear you. Your feedback will be considered.
Respectfully,
08-11-2009 12:53 PM
Tha addition of Mathscript was a much ballyhooed feature by NI marketing when it first came out. The fact that we are losing something we paid for rubs me the wrong way as well, even though I haven't used Mathscript yet. However, the fact that is is being removed from the Developer Suite pretty much ensures that I won't ever try it.
08-11-2009 01:14 PM
Dennis Knutson wrote:
kmcdevitt wrote:....At worst this is a lie. At best this is an untruth. It is not a one-off decision. It has become a pattern. You did it with Trace Execution Toolkit. You're doing it now with Math Script. And you'll be doing it in the future with other toolkits and modules. Why not just be honest and upfront about it.Kevin.Since when was the execution trace toolkit ever part of either the base, full, or pro versions of LabVIEW?
08-11-2009 01:18 PM
Intaris wrote:I have trouble giving much credence to the "we didn't know who was using it" argument.
Wouldn't a form while registering cleared that up for you?
This way you're making us pay so that you can find out where your market is. That's not a very friendly way of doing market research.
Shane.
08-11-2009 01:20 PM
Jeffrey P wrote:Kevin,
I really appreciate your taking the time to provide feedback. I know it sometimes may seem futile, but believe me, I hear you. Your feedback will be considered.
Respectfully,
08-11-2009 01:22 PM
I believe the VI analyzer used to ship with the dev suite and when the new development tools (debugging and unit testing) were introduced, it was removed from the dev suite and into a separate package with them.
Ray.R wrote:It has to be a special image to contain the code. It cannot be from a regular image..
It's a PNG file. The PNG format allows for custom binary data to be embedded in the file, which is what NI is doing.