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National Instruments 6023E User Manual

Page 110

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Appendix C

Common Questions

6023E/6024E/6025E User Manual

C-4

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24-bit counters (unlike the 16-bit counters on devices without the
DAQ-STC).

If you are using the NI-DAQ language interface or LabWindows/CVI, the
answer is no, the counter/timer applications that you wrote previously will
not work with the DAQ-STC. You must use the GPCTR functions; ICTR
and CTR functions will not work with the DAQ-STC. The GPCTR
functions have the same capabilities as the ICTR and CTR functions, plus
more, but you must rewrite the application with the GPCTR function calls.

I am using one of the general-purpose counter/timers on my device, but
I do not see the counter/timer output on the I/O connector. What am I
doing wrong?

If you are using the NI-DAQ language interface or LabWindows/CVI, you
must configure the output line to output the signal to the I/O connector. Use
the

Select_Signal

call in NI-DAQ to configure the output line. By

default, all timing I/O lines except EXTSTROBE* are high impedance.

What are the PFIs and how do I configure these lines?

PFIs are programmable function inputs. These lines serve as connections to
virtually all internal timing signals. If you are using the NI-DAQ language
interface or LabWindows/CVI, use the

Select_Signal

function to route

internal signals to the I/O connector, route external signals to internal
timing sources, or tie internal timing signals together.

If you are using NI-DAQ with LabVIEW and you want to connect external
signal sources to the PFI lines, you can use AI Clock Config, AI Trigger
Config, AO Clock Config, AO Trigger and Gate Config, CTR Mode
Config, and CTR Pulse Config advanced level VIs to indicate which
function the connected signal serves. Use the Route Signal VI to enable the
PFI lines to output internal signals.

Caution

If you enable a PFI line for output, do not connect any external signal source to it;

if you do, you can damage the device, the computer, and the connected equipment.

What are the power-on states of the PFI and DIO lines on the I/O
connector?

At system power-on and reset, both the PFI and DIO lines are set to high
impedance by the hardware. This means that the device circuitry is not
actively driving the output either high or low. However, these lines can have
pull-up or pull-down resistors connected to them as shown in Table 4-3,

I/O

Signal Summary

. These resistors weakly pull the output to either a logic

high or logic low state. For example, DIO(0) is in the high impedance state

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