Tektronix AWG610 User Manual

Page 241

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The Sequence Editor

AWG610 Arbitrary Waveform Generator User Manual

3-123

BK1.WFM

Repeat 6

BK7.WFM

Repeat 2

BK5.WFM

Repeat 3

S S S

BK7.WFM

Repeat 2

BK5.WFM

Repeat 3

BK2.WFM

Repeat 1

BK+7.WFM

Repeat 2

BK5.WFM

Repeat 3

S S S

BK7.WFM

Repeat 2

BK5.WFM

Repeat 3

BK3.PAT

Repeat 4

BK7.WFM

Repeat 2

BK5.WFM

Repeat 3

S S S

BK7.WFM

Repeat 2

BK5.WFM

Repeat 3

BK1.WFM 6

SUB8.SEQ 25

BK2.WFM 1

SUB8.SEQ 15

BK3.PAT

4

SUB8.SEQ 5

BK7.WFM

2

BK5.WFM

3

Subsequence: SUB8.SEQ

Sequence:

Internal codeimagein

the sequence memory

25 times

15 times

5 times

Subsequence call

Sequence and subsequence example

Suppose that the waveform file: BK1.WFM,,

BK2.WFM, BK3.PAT, BK5.WFM and

BK7.WFM has been created in the

waveform memory.

Compile

Figure 3-29: Compiling and storing sequences and subsequences

Defining subsequence calls with large repeat counts can generate internal code
that consumes a large amount of sequence memory. This can result in insufficient
memory errors. The AWG610 Arbitrary Waveform Generator does not check for
sequence memory availability errors. If you load a sequence and the AWG610
Arbitrary Waveform Generator displays a memory error message, you need to
reduce the number of subsequence calls, the number of repeat counts, and/or the
number of lines in the subsequences.

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