08-01-2012 09:33 AM - edited 08-01-2012 09:33 AM
Do you have the AutoTool on? If not, you need to hold down Ctrl to get a little hand cursor and click on the enum.
If you go to View->Tools Pallet you will see a little window like this:
If the top button is selected, then you will have the AutoTool on. Most of us recommend having it on.
08-01-2012 09:37 AM
when I click on the enum constant it just highlights it and doesn't give me the option for different values which I setup "First state" and "Second state" it just simply highlights it.
08-01-2012 09:39 AM
crossrulz thanks that was exactly my problem wow I feel dumb. Ravens fan I am a fan as well but I am also a Bills fan being from New York Thanks for all your help everyone!
08-01-2012 09:40 AM
Then you want to turn on the auto-tool. For some reason you have it turned off. Shift right-click on your block diagram. When the cursor palette comes up, the green light at the top is off. Click it to turn it on.
08-01-2012 09:52 AM
It's actually quite easy for that to happen, as you switch editing modes with Tab, and many are used to tab to switch fields or similar.
Shift-tab should reset it to auto-tool also.
/Y
08-01-2012 10:03 AM
@Ravens Fan wrote:
Then you want to turn on the auto-tool. For some reason you have it turned off. Shift right-click on your block diagram. When the cursor palette comes up, the green light at the top is off. Click it to turn it on.
I'm still old school and leave it turned off all the time. I started LabVIEW without it and old habots are hard to change.
08-01-2012 10:19 AM
@Mark_Yedinak wrote:
@Ravens Fan wrote:
Then you want to turn on the auto-tool. For some reason you have it turned off. Shift right-click on your block diagram. When the cursor palette comes up, the green light at the top is off. Click it to turn it on.
I'm still old school and leave it turned off all the time. I started LabVIEW without it and old habits are hard to change.
That's fine for you. As you've said, you learned to use LabVIEW without it.
For new users as this poster is, I recommend that they use it. Obviously he ran into problems because it wasn't turned on.
08-01-2012 10:23 AM
@Ravens Fan wrote:
@Mark_Yedinak wrote:
@Ravens Fan wrote:
Then you want to turn on the auto-tool. For some reason you have it turned off. Shift right-click on your block diagram. When the cursor palette comes up, the green light at the top is off. Click it to turn it on.
I'm still old school and leave it turned off all the time. I started LabVIEW without it and old habits are hard to change.
That's fine for you. As you've said, you learned to use LabVIEW without it.
For new users as this poster is, I recommend that they use it. Obviously he ran into problems because it wasn't turned on.
I agree. I was not trying to suggest he shouldn't use it. This one falls into the "to each his own" category. I was merely saying there are still some of us old timers stuck in our ways. I've tried the auto tool but I wasn't able to adopt it for myself.