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Data Acquisition Using LabVIEW

You're reading from   Data Acquisition Using LabVIEW Transform physical phenomena into computer-acceptable data using a truly object-oriented language

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782172161
Length 150 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Behzad Ehsani Behzad Ehsani
Author Profile Icon Behzad Ehsani
Behzad Ehsani
Yik Yang Yik Yang
Author Profile Icon Yik Yang
Yik Yang
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. LabVIEW Basics FREE CHAPTER 2. Most Common Communication Buses 3. Using the DAQ Assistant to Automatically Generate LabVIEW Code 4. DAQ Programming Using LabVIEW 5. Debugging Techniques 6. Real-World DAQ Programming Techniques 7. Real-Time Issues 8. DAQ at a Distance - Network and Distributed Systems 9. Alternate Software for DAQ 10. Non-National Instrument Devices DAQ 11. LabVIEW and Simple Microcontrollers

Chapter 6. Real-World DAQ Programming Techniques

We are almost halfway through the book and we have mostly talked about real-world phenomena and how we are able to use a series of VIs to quantify and represent a given real-life phenomenon (such as temperature, voltage/current movement, and so on) and classify and quantify them with numbers or values understandable to a computer. In doing so, we have been concentrated on getting one action done, but have ignored the real thinking processes and methods required just prior to running that certain VI and all work that must be done after running our main VI, when the objective of a program is a complete working system.

In other words, what we have done so far here is prove the concept. While in real-life conditions, a system (consisting of both software and hardware must stand on its own merits and results), and inputs and outputs of it must be repeatable, documentable, and generally understandable by a peer or a colleague. Even what...

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