Depending on their configuration, numeric objects can display data in different formats: alphanumeric, dial, horizontal or vertical bar, or scrolling graph.
| Display Styles for Numeric Objects |
|---|
|
| A | Alphanumeric | B | Partial Dial | C | Full Dial | D | Horizontal Bar |
| E | Vertical Bar | F | Scrolling Graph | G | Arc Meter | H | Timestamped Display |
| I | Timestamp Only | J | PC Timestamped | ||||
See
In some cases, a numeric object may use flags to indicate the low and high limits of the displayed parameter.
When used on a dial display, flags appear as colored areas on the dial. When used on other types of numeric objects, flags change the object's background color to indicate that a Low, Low Low, High, or High High limit is currently exceeded. To view or change the default colors, select Options > Flag Colors.
The following image depicts a Low Limit of 140, a Low Low Limit of 60, a High Limit of 260, and a High High Limit of 340. The portion of the dial between 140 and 260 is transparent in
Tip
If you need only Low Low and High High limits, set the Low limit equal to the Low Low limit and the High limit to the High High limit.
Flag colors are stored in the workspace file on a per-user basis. They are configurable and can be customized by anyone who has the necessary access level.
The default status object appears as an indicator light that changes color to indicate various conditions. Gray indicates the status object is not linked or not receiving data.
Like most diagram objects, status objects can be modified by any user with an appropriate access level. Depending on how a status object has been configured, its appearance and function can differ significantly from the default settings.
You can specify that it appear as an alphnumeric display or you can select custom images representing different conditions, for example for ON, OFF, and Unconnected. See
A status object that has been customized can appear as an alphanumeric display (for ON or OFF, and also for the device-dependent multi-conditions of HighHigh, High, Normal, Low, and LowLow) or a custom image (three images representing ON, OFF, and UNCONNECTED). See
Note
In some cases, the active state of a status object may have been changed (inverted) so that an active state appears as inactive and vice versa. See