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Labview sub vi not supported in this target?
I wanted to just mess around with labview and it tells me before executing a sound sub vi to play a .wav file that the sub vi is not supported in current target. I upated my directx player to the most current one and I have the sound file in a .wav format. Is it just that the labview that we got from FRC not compatible with every palette function?
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Re: Labview sub vi not supported in this target?
The realtime version of LV runs on VxWorks. On that OS, there are no general sound drivers, no speakers, and no driver code that knows what a .wav is. So, no, not all subVIs are cross-platform.
Greg McKaskle |
Re: Labview sub vi not supported in this target?
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Re: Labview sub vi not supported in this target?
This wouldn't be hard with other modules installed. After all, LV and NI equipment is often used for testing audio equipment, but you will need a speaker, an amplifier, and something to generate the signal.
A couple years ago when I wanted a noise maker on a practice robot, I mounted a school bell and a solenoid. The solenoid would thwack the bell when the condition occurred. Greg McKaskle |
Re: Labview sub vi not supported in this target?
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Re: Labview sub vi not supported in this target?
Why don't you visit ni.com and puzzle it out. I'll tell you if you found the right ones.
Greg McKaskle |
Re: Labview sub vi not supported in this target?
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http://www.ni.com/soundandvibration/ But only because it had an audio link: http://www.ni.com/audio/ |
Re: Labview sub vi not supported in this target?
http://www.ni.com/audio/
I was thinking of this one because it's the only module for sound and vibration but I wasn't sure if it lets you output continually or if it is just for testing and data acquisition. |
Re: Labview sub vi not supported in this target?
If you are talking about the products on the Solutions tab, then yes, those 24 bit cards will generate a sound. In fact they are for generating very precise tones and measuring those tones as they come out the other side of the circuit. This is how the audio manufacturers verify that the hiss, hum, and other types of noise and distortion in their circuit are at an acceptably low level. But NI makes many other boards for sound and some of them plug into the cRIO.
But I'll jump to the chase. NI makes modules such as the 9263 and 9269 that are C-series. That means they snap in to the cRIO like the FRC modules. They can generate the signals, but without changing the FPGA, they will not be available to the SW. But the platform is not a general PC, and I suspect you are wanting to make sounds for fun or entertainment. There are plenty of ways, cheap ways, to do that. The cRIO isn't really meant to be one of them. Greg McKaskle |
Re: Labview sub vi not supported in this target?
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Re: Labview sub vi not supported in this target?
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Re: Labview sub vi not supported in this target?
I would use something similar to: http://www.radioshack.com/product/in...ductId=2102855
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