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SKIP ALL Warning in HMI Live pages

Dear Friends,

as all of us know, SKIP ALL is a famous warning in HMI pages that is useful. but I am in commissioning and there are a lot of Control Studio that have not been assigned and download till now because of some reason. therefore, in HMI pages (relevant Dynamo Object to any un assigned Control Studio), this error is appeared always. meanwhile, I cannot remove these dynamo object from HMI, because these are available in P&ID.

I want to disable this warning till completion of Application. because client think this is a defect in DELTAV !!! and our explanation was not useful till now !

would you please advice me in this regard and give me any solution for disabling this Warning ?

Best Regards

Pouya

4 Replies

  • I think similar issue has been discussed in following posts.

    www.emersonexchange365.com/.../3273
  • In reply to zrehman:

    The referenced post is not related to this issue. Pouya's issue is that modules are not downloaded, and when the display is called up, all references to unavailable modules triggers the errorhandler for the display. The Skip All function allows you to ignore all the similar errors with one click rather than viewing each and every affected reference.

    I'm not aware of a method to disable this. Other than assigning the modules to the Pro Plus for testing purposes, I don't have any suggestion for preventing this warning.

    Andre Dicaire

  • In reply to Andre Dicaire:

    I've suppressed this warning by sending an Alt-A to the keyboard using the windows API. I had the code run as part of a utility to take screenshots of an entire system in the case that not all of the control modules had been built or downloaded yet. I believe you could embed the code in the CFixPicture_Initialize subroutine in any of the troublesome pictures.
  • I would be careful about assigning modules to the proplus temporarily, or for that matter trying to silence this warning on a production system, as there exists the potential to lose track of the change and potentially commission the system in an unintended way.
    The warning is there as a disclaimer that information provided by the HMI is incomplete and on a live production system this could yield confusion if it is left silenced after startup.
    If the methods described are employed, place a reminder statement on the HMI screens to illustrate the system's commissioning state only to be removed once modules are assigned and downloaded.
    As the HMI is a window into the process, the customer's concern over the warning is understandable, but the warning is there ultimately to protect their process.