01-28-2015 12:37 PM
01-30-2015 07:37 AM
And yet another 9+ year gap...http://forums.ni.com/t5/LabVIEW/bitstream-into-decimal-values/m-p/3082900#U3082900. At least this one is asking for an updated version of example code.
02-03-2015 01:09 PM
I'm on a roll today, over here - http://forums.ni.com/t5/PXI/swapping-hard-drives-between-PXI-8115-and-PXI-8105-won-t-boot-up/m-p/308...
Perhaps someone can help with my PXI dilemma?
03-24-2015 09:04 AM
@Jacobson-ni wrote:
Also, the mystery has been solved.
Intern. I didn't call them a dum-dum for HR reasons but I did think it in their general direction.
Another intern? Admittedly it isn't as bad at 9 years but still.
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10-05-2015 02:35 PM
So this thread went dry, but I had a new thought. Does anyone have any suggestions for how to deal with users who hijack a 10 year old thread for a topic that very loosely relates to them?
Does saying "Make a new thread." 10 times a day do anything? I think locking a thread older than some age goes too far, since there are times when updating a really old thread is the right way to reply. I don't mind the increase in post count, but it's not like you're going to get a kudo, or marked solution for replying with "Make a new thread."
I like the passive aggressive method of telling someone to use a snippet which I've seen recently. Can anyone think of a creative way of telling the user to not do this? Would showing a pie chart of what new technologies came out when the post was first created help drive the point home?
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10-05-2015 04:45 PM
Well, I mean... I've been guilty of dragging up an old thread in order to add to it. I'm not even sorry. I looked for 20 min for a coincise way to do that without any good answers and thought I'd save other people the trouble in the future.
10-05-2015 04:48 PM
@BowenM wrote:
Well, I mean... I've been guilty of dragging up an old thread in order to add to it.
I'm not talking about adding to a conversation. A thread similar to "DAQ hardware not working" from 2002, then a student reply with "My hardware doesn't work either, oh and how do you search an array?" but with less readable text.
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10-05-2015 05:39 PM
I should have quoted what I was referencing. Sorry! My last post was with respect to
@Hooovahh wrote:
Another intern? Admittedly it isn't as bad at 9 years but still.
As for the other... well, there is a saying: "You can't fix stupid". I can't think of a good way to prevent people from posting to old threads stupidly without restricting it all together.
10-09-2015 01:06 PM - edited 10-09-2015 01:06 PM
@Hooovahh wrote:
So this thread went dry, but I had a new thought. Does anyone have any suggestions for how to deal with users who hijack a 10 year old thread for a topic that very loosely relates to them?
Does saying "Make a new thread." 10 times a day do anything? I think locking a thread older than some age goes too far, since there are times when updating a really old thread is the right way to reply. I don't mind the increase in post count, but it's not like you're going to get a kudo, or marked solution for replying with "Make a new thread."
I like the passive aggressive method of telling someone to use a snippet which I've seen recently. Can anyone think of a creative way of telling the user to not do this? Would showing a pie chart of what new technologies came out when the post was first created help drive the point home?
I don't think there's much we can do about this other than assign an NI rep who is in charge of directing people the right way when a thread is reborn older than X years. But that's not going to happen.
I don't mind redirecting people, aggressively or passive aggressively, and a lot of the time I'll follow up through their account to see if they started a new thread (if they were nice enough in their first post). Here's an example of what I usually say.
Cheers
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10-11-2015 12:14 PM
@Hooovahh wrote:
@BowenM wrote:
Well, I mean... I've been guilty of dragging up an old thread in order to add to it.
I'm not talking about adding to a conversation. A thread similar to "DAQ hardware not working" from 2002, then a student reply with "My hardware doesn't work either, oh and how do you search an array?" but with less readable text.
Add a Macro?
You may find the style guide a useful resource to improve your code http://www.ni.com/pdf/manuals/321393d.pdf#labview_style_guideBen's famous Action Engine Nugget is always a good read. http://forums.ni.com/t5/LabVIEW/Community-Nugget-4-08-2007-Action-Engines/m-p/503801Time to XL can be downloaded from here https://decibel.ni.com/content/docs/DOC-19689Lets see what happens if I shake the 8-Ball, Sometimes it works
~~~~~~~~Oh 8-Ball ~~~~~~~~Have you read the manual for that device?What is the device model number? Can you post a link to the manual?