Campbell Scientific CR800 CR800 and CR850 Measurement and Control Systems - Page 118

StringVar, Public, As FLOAT, As String, As Float, As Long, As Boolean.

Page 118 highlights

Section 7. Installation CRBasic Example 8. Using Variable Array Dimension Indices Dim aaa As Long Dim bbb As Long Dim ccc As Long Public VariableName(4,4,4) As Float BeginProg Scan() aaa = 3 bbb = 2 ccc = 4 VariableName(aaa,bbb,ccc) = 2.718 NextScan EndProg Dimensioning Strings Strings can be declared to a maximum of two dimensions. The third "dimension" is used for accessing characters within a string. See String Operations (p. 237). String length can also be declared. A one-dimension string array called StringVar, with five elements in the array and each element with a length of 36 characters, is declared as Public StringVar(5) As String * 36 Five variables are declared, each 36 characters long: StringVar(1) StringVar(2) StringVar(3) StringVar(4) StringVar(5) Data Types Variables and stored data can be configured with various data types to optimize program execution and memory usage. The declaration of variables (via the Dim or Public instructions) allows an optional type descriptor As that specifies the data type. The default data type, without a descriptor, is IEEE4 floating point (As FLOAT). Variable data types are As String and three numeric types: As Float, As Long, and As Boolean. Stored data has additional data type options FP2, UINT2, BOOL8, and NSEC. CRBasic example Data Type Declarations (p. 120) shows these in use in the declarations and output sections of a CRBasic program. The CRBasic programming language allows mixing data types within a single array of variables; however, this practice can result in at least one problem. The datalogger support software is incapable of efficiently handling different data types for the same field name. Consequently, the software mangles the field names in data file headers. Table Data Types (p. 119) lists details of available data types. 118

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Section 7.
Installation
118
CRBasic Example 8.
Using Variable Array Dimension Indices
Dim
aaa
As Long
Dim
bbb
As Long
Dim
ccc
As Long
Public
VariableName(4,4,4)
As Float
BeginProg
Scan
()
aaa = 3
bbb = 2
ccc = 4
VariableName(aaa,bbb,ccc) = 2.718
NextScan
EndProg
Dimensioning Strings
Strings can be declared to a maximum of two dimensions. The third "dimension"
is used for accessing characters within a string.
See
String Operations
(p. 237).
String length can also be declared.
A one-dimension string array called
StringVar
, with five elements in the array
and each element with a length of 36 characters, is declared as
Public
StringVar(5)
As String
* 36
Five variables are declared, each 36 characters long:
StringVar(1)
StringVar(2)
StringVar(3)
StringVar(4)
StringVar(5)
Data Types
Variables and stored data can be configured with various data types to optimize
program execution and memory usage.
The declaration of variables (via the
Dim
or
Public
instructions) allows an
optional type descriptor
As
that specifies the data type. The default data type,
without a descriptor, is IEEE4 floating point (
As FLOAT
). Variable data types
are
As String
and three numeric types:
As Float
,
As Long
, and
As Boolean.
Stored data has additional data type options
FP2
,
UINT2
,
BOOL8
, and
NSEC
.
CRBasic example
Data Type Declarations
(p. 120)
shows these in use in the
declarations and output sections of a CRBasic program.
The CRBasic programming language allows mixing data types within a single
array of variables; however, this practice can result in at least one problem.
The
datalogger support software is incapable of efficiently handling different data
types for the same field name.
Consequently, the software mangles the field
names in data file headers.
Table
Data Types
(p. 119)
lists details of available data types.