04-04-2014 01:05 PM
04-04-2014 01:11 PM - edited 04-04-2014 01:12 PM
I would recommend posting things like that in the feedback forum. It is offtopic for LabVIEW.
04-04-2014 02:18 PM
My bad, you're absolutely right.
I am going to ask a moderator to do just that.
04-04-2014 02:19 PM
Well, actually, no need. It has already been done!
Amazing how their reaction time can be short...
05-08-2014 08:41 PM
Regarding, your title, perhaps all members should be required to read this at least once before being permitted to post questions 😄 : http://stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask
05-09-2014 10:15 AM
Thanksfully, NI got their senses back together and restored the full screen layout of their forums...
Anyhow, isn't there a sticky somewhere about this very issue? At least when you try to post an idea, a list of potentiall related topics appears.
I personally try to use the principle explained in the link you provided (do a search first, pop-up all topics of possible relatedness in separate tab - and read them! - ,paste the link to them if they appear vaguely relevant, provide some background, illustrate with an example, etc).
Sometimes, I cut it short though and some others, I am way too verbose (or screenshot happy).
What might work is computer-review process: you want to post a question, prove that you have done your research and have provided enough information (that would be what you would expect of the non-existing bug report system for LabVIEW, for instance).
The forum engine would then format all this for you (link 1, link 2, VI 1, VI 2, captions, etc) and you could add some free-form comments to instill some personality in the post.