12-07-2004 12:30 PM
Blog for (mostly LabVIEW) programmers: Tips And Tricks
12-08-2004 10:21 AM
12-08-2004 11:05 AM
Blog for (mostly LabVIEW) programmers: Tips And Tricks
12-08-2004 11:09 AM
12-08-2004 11:11 AM
12-08-2004 11:47 AM
ARG! When I'm passing a 20-meg structure to WRITE FILE, I don't want to waste the time (and memory) to make a copy !!!
I haven't used the SHOW BUFFER ALLOCATIONS feature (still on 7.0 in Windows), but it sounds like the thing to use to answer my question.
Now, the question is, what to do about it ??
I thought LabVIEW was smarter than that regarding memory usage and re-usage.
Blog for (mostly LabVIEW) programmers: Tips And Tricks
12-08-2004 11:53 AM
12-08-2004 12:02 PM
12-08-2004 12:06 PM
Because then I don't get the advantages of a datalog file - namely in file-selection dialogs and simple reading.
Blog for (mostly LabVIEW) programmers: Tips And Tricks
12-08-2004 12:11 PM
Yeah, I see it. I was "freaking out" at the idea that indeed, we are creating a separate buffer.
But your example does NOT get rid of the coercion dot!
You have wired your weird typecast into the OVERWRITE input of the NEW FILE, not the DATALOG TYPE input.
Wire it correctly, and the dot comes back.
Blog for (mostly LabVIEW) programmers: Tips And Tricks