Last Updated on May 19, 2024
LabVIEW is a graphical programming language used by professional scientists and engineers as well as students, hobbyists and makers. It was designed to enable domain experts to build power systems quickly without getting bogged down in subsystem minutia.
LabVIEW has powerful features for simulation, control and DAQ applications.
Programs are called virtual instruments, or VIs, because their appearance and operation often imitate physical instruments, such as oscilloscopes and multimeters. LabVIEW contains a comprehensive set of tools for acquiring, analyzing, displaying, and storing data, as well as tools to help you troubleshoot the code you write.
LabVIEW is a proprietary product of National Instruments. Unlike other programming languages like C or Fortran, LabVIEW is not managed or specified by a third party standards committee such as the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), and others.
Here’s our recommended free tutorials to learn LabVIEW.
1. LabVIEW Basics by MakerHub
LabVIEW Basics is a tutorial series designed to familiarize users with the LabVIEW editor and basic LabVIEW programming concepts as quickly as possible.
2. Learn to use LabVIEW with myDAQ
The Learn to LabVIEW with MyDAQ provides fundamental LabVIEW knowledge for a great out of the box experience with your MyDAQ. Each unit provides a set of videos to allow you to learn at your own pace and review material an unlimited number of times. As well, most videos are accompanied by minor exercises which will help drive home important topics and challenge you along the way.
3. LabVIEW Tutorials by James R. Drummond
This is a collection of 10 tutorials.
4. LabVIEW tutorial by Automated Microwave Measurements Laboratory
The goal of this tutorial is to be able to write a simple virtual instrument (VI – similar to a program in other programming languages) that accepts the inputs (frequency, power level etc.) from the user, processes them, communicates with the measurement equipment, retrieves the measured raw data from the equipment, analyzes them and presents them to the user in a meaningful form. Using this program, a student should also be able to save the data into a file for later usage.
All tutorials in this series:
Free Programming Tutorials | |
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Agda | Dependently typed functional language based on intuitionistic type theory |
Alice | Educational language with an integrated development environment |
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Chapel | Parallel-programming language in development at Cray Inc. |
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COBOL | Common Business-Oriented Language |
CoffeeScript | A very succinct programming language that transcompiles into JavaScript |
Coq | Dependently typed language similar to Agda, Idris, F*, Lean, and others |
Crystal | General-purpose, concurrent, multi-paradigm, object-oriented language |
CSS | CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) specifies a web page’s appearance |
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Dylan | Multi-paradigm language, supports functional & object-oriented programming |
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Eiffel | Object-oriented language |
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Erlang | General-purpose, concurrent, declarative, functional language |
F# | General purpose, strongly typed, multi-paradigm language. Part of ML |
Factor | Dynamic stack-based language |
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Fortran | The first high-level language, using the first compiler |
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Groovy | Powerful, optionally typed and dynamic language |
Hack | For the HipHop Virtual Machine (HHVM), created as a dialect of PHP |
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Icon | High-level, general-purpose language |
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JavaScript | Interpreted, prototype-based, scripting language |
Julia | High-level, high-performance language for technical computing |
Kotlin | Statically typed, general-purpose programming language with type inference |
LabVIEW | Designed to enable domain experts to build power systems quickly |
LaTeX | Professional document preparation system and document markup language |
Less | Backwards-compatible language extension for Cascading Style Sheets |
Limbo | Designed for applications running distributed systems on small computers |
Lisp | Unique features - excellent to study programming constructs |
Logo | Dialect of Lisp that features interactivity, modularity, extensibility |
Lua | Designed as an embeddable scripting language |
Markdown | Plain text formatting syntax designed to be easy-to-read and easy-to-write |
MoonScript | Dynamic scripting programmer friendly language that compiles into Lua |
Nim | Statically typed compiled systems language with syntax resembling Python |
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OCaml | General-purpose, powerful, high-level language |
Octave | High-level language, primarily intended for numerical computations |
OpenCL | Open Computing Language |
Pascal | Imperative and procedural language designed in the late 1960s |
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Pike | Interpreted, general-purpose, high-level, cross-platform, dynamic language |
PHP | PHP has been at the helm of the web for many years |
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Python | General-purpose, structured, powerful language |
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Raku | Member of the Perl family of programming languages |
Roff | Extensible text formatting language and a set of programs for printing |
Ruby | General purpose, scripting, structured, flexible, fully object-oriented language |
Rust | Ideal for systems, embedded, and other performance critical code |
Scala | Modern, object-functional, multi-paradigm, Java-based language |
Scheme | General-purpose, functional, language descended from Lisp and Algol |
Scratch | Visual programming language designed for 8-16 year-old children |
Solidity | Object-oriented, high-level language for implementing smart contracts |
SQL | Access and manipulate data held in a relational database management system |
Standard ML | One of the two main dialects of the ML language |
Swift | Powerful and intuitive general-purpose programming language |
Tcl | Dynamic language based on concepts of Lisp, C, and Unix shells |
TypeScript | Strict syntactical superset of JavaScript, adding optional static typing |
V | Statically typed compiled language to build maintainable software |
Vala | Object-oriented language with a self-hosting compiler that generates C code |
VHDL | Very High Speed Integrated Circuit Hardware Description Language |
VimL | Powerful scripting language of the Vim editor |
XML | Set of rules for defining semantic tags that describe the structure and meaning |
Zig | General-purpose programming language and toolchain |