Before DBDOC 10.4, the live data displayed in the Watch Window was stored in memory in Hyperview. If the amount of data collected was very large, this could affect performance.
As of DBDOC 10.4, trend data is no longer loaded into memory, but is cached for the display on an as-needed basis. Arbitrarily large datasets should have no significant impact on the amount of memory needed by Hyperview.
Hyperview permanently and automatically saves data collected by the Watch Window to data files. It does not save data displayed by live loop annotations or on-document live data to file. Through the Watch Window, you can export data for use in other programs, like Excel.
The data files can get quite large. If you monitor a block once a second, the data file will grow by 5MB a day. If you are not using a block, you can stop it collecting and saving data by pausing it. If you have limited hard drive space, you may need to monitor the amount of live data Hyperview has stored and delete old data.
Note: You should generally never need to access these data files directly. If you wish to analyze data in an external application, export the data using File | Export Selected Data.... When you export data, it is put into timeslots suitable for easy plotting, and data from multiple blocks can be exported together.
Hyperview stores all data that is collected in the Watch Window in data files. The status bar's WW Data Files field shows the combined size of all Watch Window data files, whether or not they are currently displayed in the Watch Window.
Data files are saved to a hidden folder, in the following locations on these platforms:
C:\Documents and Settings\<user_logon>\Application Data\GMCL\DBDOC
C:\WINNT\Profiles\<user_logon>\Application Data\GMCL\DBDOC
C:\Users\<user_logon>\AppData\Roaming\GMCL\DBDOC
You can also find them in the following manner:
*.lww
files will also contain the data files (*.csv
)
Double-clicking on a .csv
data file will usually cause it to be opened in Excel.
A typical .csv
live data file looks like this if imported into a spreadsheet:
Note: If you wish to view and analyze trend data in another application such as an external spreadsheet, it is better to select and export the data in the Watch Window than to open the Watch Window data file directly. See Exporting selected data from the Watch Window for use in Excel or other applications for more information.
If you have limited hard drive space, you may wish to delete old data. In DBDOC 11.3 and earlier, you could delete data through the Watch Window. As of DBDOC 11.4 this is no longer supported. If you do not have old data in the Watch Window, but Hyperview still reports that it has a lot of data stored, you may have stored data for blocks you are no longer monitoring.
To delete data for blocks you are no longer monitoring:
ProjectName_Block-Loop-PCU-Module-Block.csv
. To see what data they contain, use the LPMB in the file names to add the blocks to the Watch Window.
You can also share Watch Window data files with other users.
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