09-09-2005 08:28 AM
09-09-2005 04:51 PM
09-09-2005 06:05 PM
I'd like to give my two cents regarding issues/concerns brought up by previous writers on the use of LabVIEW as a large-scale application development language and making the language more powerful from a programmer's point of view. First and foremost, LV is not a "tool", it's a programming language. Big difference between the two terms. Second, it's nice to have all kinds of fancy programmer's bells and whittles, but in my own humble opinion, I think they're not necessary since LV intended use is measurement applications, and as long as you're productive developing them, then that will suffice for its target audience, scientist and engineers. And as such we want to focus on speed so we can get to answers to our scientific/engineering questions faster. If you're developing applications for a mass audience (here you're probably a professional programmer's which most of us are not), that's another matter where text-based languages with their IDE's are more suited for such tasks.
Just my opinion of course.
Otman
09-12-2005 09:32 AM
09-12-2005 04:32 PM

09-13-2005 09:33 AM
09-17-2005 04:40 AM
10-05-2005 03:22 AM
10-25-2005 11:12 AM
11-03-2005 06:07 PM
I can't figure out how you count the # of VI s in the first place. And is a large application based on the number of I/Os and calculations?
My first application was a system controller with only 32 DIO 15 Analog In, 8 Analog out and 4 rs232 ports (2 streaming data in and 2 pull/response mode) and datalogging. Among the other calculation and charting I would only consider this a small to medium application for LabView. I am guessing 50-60 VI s
As for its performance is it is big, Development time under 3 months.
(Development time would have been less if more time was put into the requirements up front.)