The Altair Community is migrating to a new platform to provide a better experience for you. In preparation for the migration, the Altair Community is on read-only mode from October 28 - November 6, 2024. Technical support via cases will continue to work as is. For any urgent requests from Students/Faculty members, please submit the form linked here
Operator Naming
Nothing in RM-5 stops me from naming my operator "Perf. Test" (note the dot after 'Perf'). But if I do that, and later want to use the Log operator to log some stuff of the Performance Operator, this fails as the GUI simply doesn't accept corresponding entries.
This is not much surprising, as the dot serves as hierarchy separator in the underlying process description in XML; still, of course, it's confusing behavior without an appropriate error message - maybe the same holds for other special characters such as '>', '<', ...
Greetings - Stefan
This is not much surprising, as the dot serves as hierarchy separator in the underlying process description in XML; still, of course, it's confusing behavior without an appropriate error message - maybe the same holds for other special characters such as '>', '<', ...
Greetings - Stefan
0
Answers
I already stumbled over this before. And was shocked, too. But I thought I had solved this problem. Do you use the Release Candidate?
Greetings,
Sebastian
I use 5.0.001 - is this still at candidate level or released?
Stefan
this is the Release Candidate. Although the functionality is (nearly) complete, we are waiting for new documentation before publishing finally.
Greetings,
Sebastian
Another frustrating thing about naming operators is the fact that you have to confirm the name by pressing return.
Would it be easy to make a click on the process workspace to accept the changes. This always messes me up. For example in PowerPoint you just edit and click out to confirm, which is probably why I have the tendency to click out before pressing return and subsequently loose my rename changes.
-Gagi
I will check if it's possible.
Greetings,
Sebastian
it was. Is solved.
Greetings,
Sebastian