10-30-2009 11:03 AM
10-30-2009 01:01 PM
You don't need to move the cursor to find out frequency, you need to analyze the signal data itself.
Ask your question with more details, and you'll get a better answer.
If it's a digital signal, just search for a rising edge(A), then search for a falling edge(B), then search for a rising edge(C).
(C-A) / Sample Period is your frequency.
(B-A) / (C-A) is your duty cycle.
If it's an analog signal, establish a threshold and do basically the same thing.
Blog for (mostly LabVIEW) programmers: Tips And Tricks
10-31-2009 08:01 AM
actually this is a warning signal.. it has some differnt frequenics ..
the cursor will move automatically and find the differnt frequenics.. itself...
how the cursor will move automatically.. give some possible solutions....
10-31-2009 08:10 AM
10-31-2009 08:23 AM
the cursor will move automatically and find the differnt frequenics.. itself...
how the cursor will move automatically.. give some possible solutions...
Cursors don't move automatically and find anything.
Your code can move the cursor, but you have to tell it where and when to move.
Blog for (mostly LabVIEW) programmers: Tips And Tricks