06-19-2007 09:02 AM
06-19-2007 09:27 AM
06-19-2007 10:17 AM
06-19-2007 11:05 AM
06-19-2007 11:15 AM
If it doesn't, what's the point of the breakpoint then? Like I said, that's the way breakpoints work.
hankypanky said:
but surely it doesn't "have to" switch windows like that...
06-19-2007 11:31 AM
06-20-2007 10:18 AM
Hi,
I would like to clarify - breakpoints are meant to pause execution - not stop it, and are meant for debugging. The LabVIEW help for Placing and Removing Breakpoints gives the things you can do with breakpoints - and one of the main things it should be used for is probing wires (which must be done from the Block Diagram). This cannot be changed because it is meant to help and it the purpose of a breakpoint. You are more than welcome to make a product suggestion for this. I hope this clears this up!
Stephanie
06-20-2007 10:40 AM
Well said, and my whole point in the first place. I have never seen breakpoints work in any other way in any other development environment, be it LabVIEW, or Visual Studio, Visual Interdev, or MPLAB, or whatever. In fact, I don't think they should work differently because of what a breakpoint is designed to do. Sometimes a tool is designed to work a certain way. If it doesn't do what you want then you need to (a) understand the purpose of the tool and accept it and move one, or (b) reconsider what it is that you really want to do, or (c) find another way of doing what you want instead of changing the fundamental operation of the tool. One could argue that the user is basically saying: "Well, I've got this screw I need to turn and I have a hammer here, and I want it to work like a screwdriver, and I find it annoying that it doesn't because in my opinion a hammer should work like a screwdriver."
Stephanie said:
breakpoints are meant to pause execution - not stop it, and are meant for debugging
This cannot be changed because it is meant to help and it the purpose of a breakpoint.