National Instruments SCXI -1125 用户手册

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Chapter 5    Using the SCXI-1125
5-26
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The last parameter, channels, is the list of channels that are scanned for 
module z. It can have several formats:
obx ! scy ! mdz ! 
n, where n is a single input channel.
obx ! scy ! mdz ! 
n1:n2, where n1 and n2 represent a sequential 
list of input channels, inclusive.
obx ! scy ! mdz ! cjtemp
, where 
cjtemp
 is the CJC channel. 
You can scan this channel with other analog input channels. For 
compatibility reasons, you can use 
mtemp
 in place of 
cjtemp
.
obx ! scy ! mdz ! 
(n1, n2, n3:n4, n1, n5, n2), where n1n2, and 
n5 represent single channels, not necessarily sequential, and n3 and n4 
represent the endpoints of a sequential list of channels, inclusiveIn 
this case, channels n1 and n2 have explicitly been repeated in the 
channel list. This random scanning format is not supported on all SCXI 
modules.
obx
 
!
 
sc
y 
!
 
md
z 
!
 
calgnd
 n1:n2 where n1 and n2 represent a list of 
autozeroed channels, inclusive. In this case autozero channels cannot 
be scanned with input channels or the cold-junction channel, but must 
be scanned separately. This feature is useful for measuring offsets that 
appear due to temperature drifts in the analog circuitry. You can 
subtract these offsets from subsequent input readings to correct for 
temperature drift. Refer to Appendix A, 
, for 
determining how temperature drift can affect your measurement 
accuracy.
Note 
Repeating channels or having channels out of sequence in a scan list is not supported 
on all SCXI modules. Please refer to the manual of each module for information on this 
feature.
LabVIEW and the Virtual Channel String
For LabVIEW, Measurement Studio, and Visual Basic, the channel string 
can also contain virtual channels. For the SCXI-1125, these virtual 
channels are analog input channels you create that have custom names 
(called tags in Measurement Studio), that perform scaling, linearization, 
autozeroing, and CJC transparently without additional code. Virtual 
channels are useful when sensors requiring different scaling factors are 
used on the same SCXI-1125 channel. Using virtual channels, sensors 
needing special scaling can be used in a generic analog input application 
without performing hard-coded scaling or linearization. If the scaling 
changes or you want to connect a different sensor to the SCXI-1125, no 
changes are needed in the application. All that is required is creating a 
different virtual channel and using its name in the channel string.