03-21-2012 12:35 PM
@Steve Chandler wrote:
You can imagine how good it must have felt to see it come alive after that many saves.
No you know how Dr. Frankenstein must have felt. 😄
03-21-2012 10:36 PM - edited 03-21-2012 10:36 PM
@altenbach wrote:
What we need is a fully graphical implementation of regular expressions. No characters allowed! 😄
^W[.]+$[:D]
03-22-2012 11:57 AM
@altenbach wrote:
@Steve Chandler wrote:
You can imagine how good it must have felt to see it come alive after that many saves.
No you know how Dr. Frankenstein must have felt. 😄
03-22-2012 12:09 PM
@Robert Cole wrote:
@altenbach wrote:
@Steve Chandler wrote:
You can imagine how good it must have felt to see it come alive after that many saves.
No you know how Dr. Frankenstein must have felt. 😄
Don't we all feel this way with our projects?
And looking at this the "Young Frankenstien" must have felt these (NSFW)?
03-22-2012 12:15 PM
I should stress that while Steve's creation does indeed bring the dead back to life, there are no moving parts.
03-27-2012 06:19 AM
You finally got LV to run on a Commodore 64?
03-27-2012 07:45 AM
@Wayne.C wrote:
You finally got LV to run on a Commodore 64?
Or maybe the other way around?
03-27-2012 08:46 AM
04-25-2012 02:15 PM
did u use Eureka RFID? as far as i know, labview doesn't include the driver of Eureka RFID. do u have a solution of that?
04-26-2012 07:13 AM
When I use to code Matlab, we did what we called the "Engineering Dance" for Eureka moments. A nerdy,embarassing dance that was only done in view of teammates.
This eventually created a function called "dance()". This was placed at the end of a LONG coding spree that we were testing for the first time. If it ever eached the end, the function would display this image, usually with the word "BOOYAH" overlayed.