I was so happy when someone shared that "CNTL + F" brings up the search window. Unfortunately, when I try to search the blocks (see the first image) and press the up/down "next in search" arrows in the search window, I get the second image and, no matter how many times I press the up or down arrows, the view stays the same.
Is there an advanced instruction set for the search window? I cannot imagine that to be so but I sure do not know why my blocks are not being searched. Any instruction or suggestions are greatly appreciated.
hi I advise you not to use ctrl + f but to write directly on the blocks page because ctrl + f is a browser function not AI2 (only works on the block section)
Wow! Thank you for that. I will get downloading and see if I can get that up to speed. As I highly respect your mastery of AI2, might you look at a post I made in the Help page early this morning? I am trying to achieve four logical outputs but my Metric data entry is interpreted as Imperial in the Get Data block and I do not know why. Thank you, again, for the search tool upgrade. It is so much more powerful than the cntl/F function. The title refers to my "ILL LOGIC."
Agreed. Thank you for responding and allowing others to help - even if that help was not what I was seeking. After two other assistants suggested either a truncation of my Get_Data block or a complete partial revision, I had a "Eureka" moment. Since I determined that the Metric data inputted was being processed as though it was Imperial, I took a good hard look at my logic and I found that, when calling the Metric button, I had failed to dis-enable the Imperial button, and vice versa. Since the logical path asked if the Imperial button was enabled, the metric data never had a chance to see the light of day. Adding two small blocks solved my problem. I posted the solution in my response to those seeking to assist me if you are interested in what I came up with..
My solution may not be elegant and there may be far too many lines of code (which I will work on eliminating later) but it works flawlessly and I do not believe that end users will be looking under the hood and criticizing my coding efforts.
Thank you for all the hand-holding and guidance. My self-confidence is growing exponentially as this project proceeds - especially when I ultimately find the solution on my own!