LabVIEW is graphically based, meaning you drag around various building blocks and connect them in a data flow architecture
LabVIEW is graphically based, meaning you drag around various building blocks and connect them in a data flow architecture. It’s like drawing a block diagram, except you’re drawing your code, as opposed to text-based languages like C# & VHDL where you type out in text what you want the software to do.
There are some additional corner cases out there, but this covers most applications we see at Viewpoint. Historically, LabVIEW has been widely adopted in the automated test realm, becoming the de facto standard in that application space, whereas more recently it’s been gaining traction within the realm of industrial embedded monitoring and control.
LabVIEW is a software development environment created by National Instruments. Originally it was focused on taking measurements from various lab instruments, but it’s expanded drastically from its inception. LabVIEW is not a coding language, it’s a development environment. The language is called “G”, but most people refer to LabVIEW as if it’s a language (i.e., most people would say “it’s coded in LabVIEW”).
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