05-20-2014 06:26 AM
Hi Matt,
Yes, you are doing it right:
(and reappears each subsequent time one hits the Start Capture or Quit Program buttons).
This is with 64-bit Windows 7 Enterprise, running Labview 2013 SP1 (13.0.1f2, 64-bit). I have two computers like this and they both give the message.
If I try it on an old laptop (Windows Vista, Labview 2013 SP1 (13.0.1, 32 bit)) I don't get the message. Interestingly, when I quit Labview on this machine it prompts me to save all the VIs, with a message for each one something like "VI has been reconfigured for new system. VI has been recompiled". Maybe the recompilation fixes the problem or maybe it is a fault with the 64-bit implementation?
Thanks
Roger
05-20-2014 06:43 AM
Hi Roger,
I'll see about installing 64-bit LabVIEW and testing this. Can I ask why you are using 64-bit however? Even on a 64-bit machine, we would recommend using 32-bit LabVIEW, as this is much better for compatibility, and much easier to support. If you don't have any need for the 64-bit LabVIEW features I would highly recommend switching those PCs to 32-bit.
Kind regards,
05-20-2014 10:23 AM
Hi Matt
I just installed the university-licensed version from our School of Engineering intranet - only has the 64 bit version.
I don't think NI has told them that the 32-bit version is more reliable.
Roger
05-20-2014 11:22 AM
@roger1922 wrote:
Hi Matt
I just installed the university-licensed version from our School of Engineering intranet - only has the 64 bit version.
I don't think NI has told them that the 32-bit version is more reliable.
Roger
Well, not more reliable - just more compatible. Remember how hard it used to be to find drivers and stuff for 64-bit Windows? Well, there's much more support in the NI world for LV 32-bit than LV 64-bit.
BTW - if you have a copy of LabVIEW 32-bit, you can install it alongside the 64-bit version using the same license.
05-22-2014 04:18 AM
@billko wrote:
@roger1922 wrote:
Hi Matt
I just installed the university-licensed version from our School of Engineering intranet - only has the 64 bit version.
I don't think NI has told them that the 32-bit version is more reliable.
Roger
Well, not more reliable - just more compatible. Remember how hard it used to be to find drivers and stuff for 64-bit Windows? Well, there's much more support in the NI world for LV 32-bit than LV 64-bit.
BTW - if you have a copy of LabVIEW 32-bit, you can install it alongside the 64-bit version using the same license.
05-22-2014 04:44 AM
@roger1922 wrote:
@billko wrote:
Well, not more reliable - just more compatible. Remember how hard it used to be to find drivers and stuff for 64-bit Windows? Well, there's much more support in the NI world for LV 32-bit than LV 64-bit.
BTW - if you have a copy of LabVIEW 32-bit, you can install it alongside the 64-bit version using the same license.
Thanks Bill, I have now got both 32 and 64-bit installed.
The bug occurs in the 64-bit version but not the 32-bit. It's not a question of drivers - Labview is just generating random numbers, not communicating with any kind of hardware. So I would say the 32-bit actually is "more reliable".
Roger
05-22-2014 08:00 PM
Well, I'm glad you found a workaround for it. (I call it a "workaround" because you shouldn't really have to install a different version of LabVIEW than the w=one you wanted to use.) 🙂