I may be hoping for the impossible here, but is there any means of testing under PE6 simulation inter-program I2C comms?
I've written a couple of programs that interact with each other via the I2C comms and it would make life a whole lot easier if there is some method of simulating how one program communicates with and reacts with another program (or more).
Or is PE6 a basic, only-one-running-program-allowed simulator?
I have noticed on a couple of occasions that my PE6 will appear to go totally unresponsive when in simulate mode, yet if I go to another tab (another program) and hit "run simulation" the first (hung) program springs back into life when I return to that tab. Could this be what I'm looking for, namely the possibility of two running programs (on one PE6)? And could this also, more specifically, simulate the I2C comms between the (possible) two running programs?
Or, as I asked at the top, am I hoping for the impossible?
Using Win10 Pro 1909, PE6 v6.1.0.0 running under Win8 compatibility.
TIA
I've written a couple of programs that interact with each other via the I2C comms and it would make life a whole lot easier if there is some method of simulating how one program communicates with and reacts with another program (or more).
Or is PE6 a basic, only-one-running-program-allowed simulator?
I have noticed on a couple of occasions that my PE6 will appear to go totally unresponsive when in simulate mode, yet if I go to another tab (another program) and hit "run simulation" the first (hung) program springs back into life when I return to that tab. Could this be what I'm looking for, namely the possibility of two running programs (on one PE6)? And could this also, more specifically, simulate the I2C comms between the (possible) two running programs?
Or, as I asked at the top, am I hoping for the impossible?
Using Win10 Pro 1909, PE6 v6.1.0.0 running under Win8 compatibility.
TIA