Returns an image of the block diagram and scales it proportionally according to the maximum width and height you wire to the method. For example, if the image of the block diagram is 200 by 200 pixels and you wire a value of 50 to maximum width and a value of 100 to maximum height, this method returns an image that is 50 by 50 pixels. If you do not wire a value to maximum width or maximum height, the image retains its actual size.

You also can use the Append VI Block Diagram to Report VI to create an image of a block diagram and append it to a report.

Parameters

Name Data type Required Description
Image Depth ci32.png No

Sets the color depth, or number of supported colors, of the image: 1 (1-bit, black and white), 4 (4-bit, 16 colors), 8 (8-bit, 256 colors), or 24 (24-bit, true color). The default is 8.

Image Data icclst.png No
Information about the image so you can use the Draw Flattened Pixmap VI to draw it as a picture or use the Graphics Formats VIs to save the image to a file. This cluster is similar to the image data output of the Read JPEG File, Read PNG File, and Read BMP File VIs.
  • image type—Reserved for future use.
  • image depth—Specifies the color depth of the image, which is the number of bits to use to describe the color of each pixel in the image. Valid values include 1, 4, 8, and 24 bits per pixel. image depth affects how LabVIEW interprets the values of image and colors.
  • image—Array of bytes that describes the color of each pixel in the image in raster order. The value of image depth determines how LabVIEW interprets the value of this output.

    If image depth is 24, each pixel has three bytes to describe its color. The first byte for each pixel describes the red value, the second byte describes the green value, and the third byte describes the blue value.

    If image depth is 8, each pixel has one byte to describe its color. The value of each bit corresponds to an element in colors, which stores 32-bit RGB values where the most-significant byte is zero, followed in order by red, green, and blue values.

    If image depth is 4, the behavior is similar to when image depth is 8 except valid values in image include 0 through 15.

    If image depth is 1, any value of zero in image corresponds to element 0 in colors. All other values correspond to element 1 in colors.

    The size of the array might be larger than expected due to padding.
  • mask—Array of bytes in which each bit describes mask information for a pixel. The first byte describes the first eight pixels, the second byte describes the next eight pixels, and so on. If a bit is zero, LabVIEW draws the corresponding pixel as transparent. If the array is empty, LabVIEW draws all pixels without transparency. If the array does not contain a bit for each pixel in the image, LabVIEW draws any pixels missing from the array without transparency.
  • colors—Array of RGB color values that correspond to the values in image. The value of image depth determines how LabVIEW interprets the value of this output. If image depth is 24, LabVIEW ignores this output. If image depth is 8, the array has 256 elements. If image depth is 4, the array has 16 elements. If image depth is 1, the array has 2 elements.
  • Rectangle—Cluster that contains coordinates that describe the bounding rectangle of the image, where the upper-left corner is at (0,0). The bottom right edges of the bounds does not include the image.
Maximum Width ci32.png No

Sets the maximum width of the scaled image.

Maximum Height ci32.png No

Sets the maximum height of the scaled image.

Remarks

The following table lists the characteristics of this method.

Short Name BD.Get Image Scaled
Data type No return value
Available in Run-Time Engine No
Available in Real-Time Operating System No
Settable when the VI is running Yes
Loads the front panel into memory Yes
Need to authenticate before use Yes
Loads the block diagram into memory Yes
Remote access allowed Yes
Must wait until user interface is idle Yes
Available with control VIs No
Available with global VIs No
Available with strict type definitions No
Available with polymorphic VIs No