10-30-2018 11:40 AM
Hello everyone,
As an update for all of you. I spoke about this behavior with some of our LabVIEW Product Support Engineers, and we decided to go ahead and file the CAR #718053 to address this issue. While we still are not able to consistently reproduce it, it is clear it is not an isolated case as many of you have experienced it.
Thank you all for helping us make LabVIEW better!
10-30-2018 12:46 PM
Hi oscarfonseca,
thank you very much. Good to know that this strange bug is on the list now.
I write LabVIEW apps in my company and a few colleagues have told me, that it looks like the button is a switch. Even though it is latching when released. So I recompiled my apps in 32 bits for now, as this visual bug may lead to confusing the user.
Kind Regards,
Milad
12-14-2018 07:35 AM
So glad I found this thread this was driving me crazy.
I have the same problem on Labview 64 bit and I could not understand why my .EXE application was fine but when editing/testing the Vi my buttons were acting strange.
I had the applciation built for a 32 bit computer that's why..
03-18-2019 04:13 AM
05-28-2019 01:07 PM
I am also experiencing this bug. I am running LV2018 64bit. The hover effect does not work. Are there any updates?
05-29-2019 11:00 AM - edited 05-29-2019 11:06 AM
I can confirm that this bug also manifests itself in the recent LabVIEW 2019 (64-bit, of course). First time, when I was making a fresh VI, I did not see the issue, but after I have saved the VI and relaunched LabVIEW, I saw it immediately. BTW affects NXG controls as well.
06-03-2019 06:25 AM
I did see this in my own applications a few times now.
It starts happening for some reason, and then seems to happen for every new Boolean as well. But I did make it 'work' again, but I have no idea how. It seems rather random... My first observation was that it happened globally, for all Booleans, but at some point some instances worked correctly, while others failed.
06-25-2019 06:02 AM
This drives me mad. Can someone from NI update status on this issue? How can I release application which woks like this?
Is there a way to officially report a bug?
06-25-2019 06:09 AM
You can release it as a 32-bit executable - if you don't need 64-bit memory space, and you either don't have dlls, or the dlls have 32-bit counterparts installed/included.
06-25-2019 06:12 AM
@Zyga wrote:
This drives me mad. Can someone from NI update status on this issue? How can I release application which woks like this?
Is there a way to officially report a bug?
Did you notice that in a post above that it was already reported as a bug and assigned a CAR#?