02-10-2006 11:13 AM
02-10-2006 11:22 AM - edited 02-10-2006 11:22 AM
Also make sure you don't have any objects or structures hidden under the case or inside the case but clipped by the boundaries.
Message Edited by altenbach on 02-10-2006 09:25 AM
02-10-2006 11:23 AM
02-10-2006 12:45 PM
03-10-2010 03:11 PM
08-17-2020 03:22 PM
I get this error. I search and search and cannot find the unwired tunnel. Is there an easier way? The only way that I have used to find the problem is to delete the structure and then try again.
This has also happened to me on other occasions. There should be a way that LabVIEW can point to the bad tunnel.
08-17-2020 03:27 PM
I finally found the bad terminal. It was hidden by the case structure. LabVIEW really needs a simple way that one can be guided trying to find them. It took me 30 minutes to find the problem.
08-17-2020 03:34 PM
Click on the broken run arrow. It will list all your sins in a dialog box.
08-17-2020 03:37 PM
There is a simple way: it's called using best practices and not putting structures on top of code. And even if it was covered, if you just hit Show Error on the Error List window, it will highlight where the error is no matter what's covering it.
Saying "Thanks that fixed it" or "Thanks that answers my question" and not giving a Kudo or Marked Solution, is like telling your waiter they did a great job and not leaving a tip. Please, tip your waiters.
08-17-2020 08:03 PM
Not everyone is perfect. Sometimes when you remove all broken wires, one finds that an important one was deleted by mistake. Good software design makes it easy to debug.