04-19-2013 06:33 PM
Hello,
Currently prepping for CLD exam.
I was told we could use LV 2012 Professional Version. Is it OK during exam to use Project template for Queued Message Handler to generate VIs and block diagram code? Or must a QMH be generated from scratch?
I assume there will be a main VI which we must modify, but the thought was to reuse the generated template code into this VI.
Thank you,
04-20-2013 08:48 AM - edited 04-20-2013 08:54 AM
You can use templates, examples etc that ships with LabVIEW. I am sure I read this somewhere, will post a link if I find it.
Here is one tip offered by one of the experts: http://forums.ni.com/t5/Certification/Car-Wash-REVIEW/m-p/2267688#M540
04-21-2013 05:50 PM
Correct. Any templates that ship with LabVIEW can be used.
I would strongly urge not using it without familiarity. The CLD is definitely not the time to have to research a template or other architecture.
02-08-2015 02:27 PM
I have an additional question along the same line.
In the example exams it is stated that "you must maintain the folder heirarchy" and provided is a directory labeled SubVIs.
Can we place sub-directories in the SubVI directory (those that might be part of a template for example) or do all our subVIs have to reside in that one folder called SubVIs?
02-09-2015 10:34 PM
I would recommend using virtual folders. But, of course you do have to save your work to the thumb drive that they provide you with. So pay a little bit of attention to disk location.of course the Project Explorer will allow you to see exactly where everything is saved on disk. use the Project Explorer.
Hint .. Show file names.
02-11-2015 06:24 AM
Thank you Jeff.
Virtual folders does make keeping track of the SubVIs much easier.
Mark
02-12-2015 12:54 PM
I'd recommend using the Producer/Consumer Design Pattern for Events as your template. This template comes with LabVIEW so you won't have to generate it at test time. In my opinion the Producer/Consumer in conjunction with FGV usage gives excellent coding flexibility in a fairly simple to use format. State machines are ok but you can get tangled up with them as the coding complexity grows.