06-11-2015 10:31 AM
@Hooovahh wrote:
Messed up is not a technical term ...
Uhm. In this case, yes I believe messed up is appropriate. Or as my daughter once said when she forgot she was in my presence: "That's f uh messed up".
06-11-2015 12:02 PM
@PaulG. wrote:
@Hooovahh wrote:
Messed up is not a technical term ...
Uhm. In this case, yes I believe messed up is appropriate.
I didn't say it wasn't the appropriate response, I said it wasn't a technical term. Before posting an image or source, messed up can mean just about anything. If a customer called and said the software was messed up, I'd have a similar response to them asking for what they actually mean.
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06-11-2015 01:04 PM
The user said it was "messed up", and I figured it was like the change in Windows problem since he also posted in that thread. Re: Block diagrams messed up: Win 7 or LabVIEW 1012?
It turned out the mess up was a completely different situation, and one I wasn't anticipating.
That's why it is important to give details instead of saying it is just "messed up", or saying "results are wrong" or "I have an error".