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A [[time stamp]] is a data type for storing absolute time with high precision.  It is a time-zone-independent number of seconds that have elapsed since 12:00 a.m., Friday, January 1, 1904, Universal Time.  In memory, LabVIEW stores a time stamp as a cluster of four integers, where the first two integers (64 bits) represent the time-zone-independent number of complete seconds that have elapsed since 12:00 a.m., Friday, January 1, 1904, Universal Time. The next two integers (64 bits) represent the fractions of seconds.
A [[time stamp]], first introduced to LabVIEW in version 7.0, is a data type for storing absolute time with high precision.  It is a time-zone-independent number of seconds that have elapsed since 12:00 a.m., Friday, January 1, 1904, Universal Time.  In memory, LabVIEW stores a time stamp as a cluster of four integers, where the first two integers (64 bits) represent the time-zone-independent number of complete seconds that have elapsed since 12:00 a.m., Friday, January 1, 1904, Universal Time. The next two integers (64 bits) represent the fractions of seconds.


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://zone.ni.com/reference/en-XX/help/371361D-01/lvhowto/numeric_data_types_table/ LabVIEW 8.5 Help>>Numeric Data Types Table]


*[http://zone.ni.com/reference/en-XX/help/371361B-01/lvconcepts/how_labview_stores_data_in_memory/ LabVIEW 8.2 Help>>How LabVIEW Stores Data in Memory]
[[category:data types]]
*[http://zone.ni.com/reference/en-XX/help/371361B-01/lvhowto/numeric_data_types_table/ LabVIEW 8.2 Help>>Numeric Data Types Table]

Latest revision as of 03:50, 15 March 2008

A time stamp, first introduced to LabVIEW in version 7.0, is a data type for storing absolute time with high precision. It is a time-zone-independent number of seconds that have elapsed since 12:00 a.m., Friday, January 1, 1904, Universal Time. In memory, LabVIEW stores a time stamp as a cluster of four integers, where the first two integers (64 bits) represent the time-zone-independent number of complete seconds that have elapsed since 12:00 a.m., Friday, January 1, 1904, Universal Time. The next two integers (64 bits) represent the fractions of seconds.

External links