 wppome
		
			wppome
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
			03-19-2019 08:36 PM
hi, everyone.
I want to know where I can find these blocks.
It is pointed with a blue arrow.
thank you.
 Bob_Schor
		
			Bob_Schor
		
		
		 
		
		
		
		
		
	
			03-19-2019 09:06 PM
At the beginning of this Forum, you'll find a section devoted to learning LabVIEW. Start taking the Tutorials you find there, and you'll learn about some of the functions that ship with LabVIEW. You could look for Functions that look similar, or you could ask your fellow students, or even your Professor, for help ...
Bob Schor
 altenbach
		
			altenbach
		
		
		 
		
		
		
		
		
	
			
			
    
	
		
		
		03-20-2019
	
		
		01:48 AM
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
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		 Content Cleaner
		
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Are you looking at pictures or are you looking at a diagram? On a diagram, just hover over the function with the context help open (ctrl+h).
If you are just looking at a picture, it seems rather pointless, but the one on the right is "index array" and the one on the left is an obsolete version of peak detector and you should be replacing it with the updated version.
 wiebe@CARYA
		
			wiebe@CARYA
		
		
		 
		
		
		
		
		
	
			03-20-2019 07:30 AM - edited 03-20-2019 07:41 AM
Not going to give you the fish (Bob's spot on).
A hint on how to catch fish: turn on the label of those objects (right click>visible items). Or turn on the LV help (ctrl+h) and hover over them.
EDIT: Of course if you got an image (as homework), this won't work...
 altenbach
		
			altenbach
		
		
		 
		
		
		
		
		
	
			03-20-2019 11:18 AM
@wppome wrote:
I want to know where I can find these blocks.
.
These functions are of course in the function palette of the LabVIEW development system. It is significantly more important to know what they do than where to find them, but for that you need background and context unless you are e.g. playing some treasure-hunt game where "finding" is the only object.
Are you trying to understand a program or duplicate a program from a picture? What does the program do? Who wrote it? What are you trying to do with it? If you are familiar with LabVIEW and dataflow, just look at the big picture. Where is the input data coming from? where do the outputs go? What purpose could these function serve in the overall flow of things?
If you are not familiar with LabVIEW, and want to learn, follow the advice by others. You cannot understand how a car works by knowing where to "find" a lug nut. 😄
 wiebe@CARYA
		
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		03-21-2019
	
		
		03:15 AM
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
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@wppome wrote:
I want to know where I can find these blocks.
Quick drop... Once you know the names...