© Copyright 1999-2023 Cognex Corporation. All rights reserved.
Revision: 6.3.2.5, 2023 May 23
This document describes the In-Sight Display Control for Microsoft® Windows®, including the following topics:
The In-Sight Display Control (CvsInSightDisplay) forms the heart of the Job View window in In-Sight Explorer and provides a display of images, graphics and spreadsheet data when connected to an In-Sight vision system. This control is packaged as a .NET control that can be inserted into a Microsoft Visual Studio C# .NET or VB.NET Windows Forms application.
This section describes system requirements for the In-Sight Display Control software.
Notes:
| Minimum | Recommended |
|---|---|
| Intel® Celeron® 1000M processor running at 1.8GHz (or equivalent) | Intel Core™ i7 processor running at 2.7GHz (or equivalent) |
| 2GB of available RAM | 4GB of available RAM |
| 4GB of available disk space | 8GB of available disk space |
| Video card that can display 1024 x 768 resolution at 24-bit color depth (the DPI Display setting must be set to 96 DPI) | Video card that can display 1920 x 1080 resolution at 32-bit color depth (the DPI Display setting must be set to 96 DPI) |
| Network interface card (at least 100Mbps) for connecting to an In-Sight vision system | Gigabit network interface card for connecting to multiple In-Sight vision systems |
In-Sight software has been tested on the following operating systems:
Although In-Sight Display Control may function on other operating systems, systems not meeting the preceding requirements have not been tested and are not supported.
In-Sight 6.3.2 software contains three firmware versions:
In-Sight vision systems that have older firmware versions might work properly. However, some features are unsupported with older firmware versions and are not fully tested. For optimal performance, update vision systems that run older firmware to the most recent, supported firmware versions. For a list of models and supported firmware versions, see the Firmware Versions topic in the In-Sight® Explorer Help file.
In-Sight software requires Microsoft .NET Framework 4.5.2. If the In-Sight software installer fails to detect Microsoft .NET Framework 4.5.2, it attempts to download and install it.
The In-Sight Display Control is installed with the In-Sight Software and In-Sight SDK installers, and you must be logged on as a user with full administrative privileges to install the software.
In-Sight Display Control Sample Projects are installed to the following folder: C:\Users\Public\Documents\Cognex\In-Sight\In-Sight Sample Projects 6.3.2. A shortcut on the Microsoft Windows Start menu is available to open this location.
Refer to the In-Sight Display Control help file for a complete list of enhancements and other API changes in this release of the In-Sight Display Control.
| Issue# | Issue |
|---|---|
| 5319 |
When a PairDistance function is added to an Abs formula, as in either of the following examples, "Abs(B2)+PairDistance(C2,0,1)" or "PairDistance(C2,0,1)+Abs(B2)", the expression may cause the Property Sheet to open incorrectly.
Workaround: The PairDistance function should be placed in its own cell and referenced by the other expression. |
| 5230 | If you add an OPC Tag from an In-Sight Display Control, the corresponding OPC Tag inside the In-Sight OPC Server must use the exact same upper and lower case characters. If the two names do not match exactly, a Configuration Error will result in the OPC Server. |
| 5093 | The Open and Save File dialogs (such as CTRL+O), when invoked from the In-Sight Display Control in a custom .NET environment, differ in behavior from the Open/Save File dialogs launched from In-Sight Explorer. Under the list of "In-Sight Sensors," In-Sight Explorer will list all In-Sight vision systems on the local subnet and any Explorer Host Table entries. When launched from an In-Sight Display control in a .NET environment, however, these same dialogs will show the list of all systems on the local subnet and In-Sight Host Table entries stored on the vision system to which the display is connected. |