Last Modified: September 5, 2019
Writes the waveform to onboard memory from a one-dimensional array of unsigned 32-bit data.
Note
This
node
accepts multiple data types for the
data
parameter. Hover over
data
for more information.
waveform name
The name of the waveform to configure position.
You should name waveforms using this
node
under either of the following conditions:
-
You are using scripts.
-
You want to download multiple waveforms into the hardware.
session in
Instrument session obtained from the
Initialize Acquisition Session
node, the
Initialize Generation Session
node, or the
Initialize External Calibration
node.
error in
Error conditions that occur before this node runs.
The node responds to this input according to standard error behavior.
Many nodes provide an
error in
input and an
error out
output so that the node can respond to and communicate errors that occur while code is running. The value of
error in
specifies whether an error occurred before the node runs. Most nodes respond to values of
error in
in a standard, predictable way.
error in
does not contain an error
|
error in
contains an error
|
|
|
If no error occurred before the node runs, the node begins execution normally.
If no error occurs while the node runs, it returns no error. If an error does occur while the node runs, it returns that error information as
error out.
|
If an error occurred before the node runs, the node does not execute. Instead, it returns the
error in
value as
error out.
|
Default:
No error
data
The specified samples to write.
This input accepts the following data types:
-
Waveform
-
1D array of 8-bit unsigned integers
-
1D array of 16-bit unsigned integers
-
1D array of 32-bit unsigned integers
session out
Handle that identifies the session in all subsequent
node
calls.
The
session out
parameter is obtained from the
Initialize Acquisition Session
node
or the
Initialize Generation Session
node.
error out
Error information.
The node produces this output according to standard error behavior.
Many nodes provide an
error in
input and an
error out
output so that the node can respond to and communicate errors that occur while code is running. The value of
error in
specifies whether an error occurred before the node runs. Most nodes respond to values of
error in
in a standard, predictable way.
error in
does not contain an error
|
error in
contains an error
|
|
|
If no error occurred before the node runs, the node begins execution normally.
If no error occurs while the node runs, it returns no error. If an error does occur while the node runs, it returns that error information as
error out.
|
If an error occurred before the node runs, the node does not execute. Instead, it returns the
error in
value as
error out.
|
Where This Node Can Run:
Desktop OS: Windows
FPGA: Not supported
Web Server: Not supported in VIs that run in a web application
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