I am working on my phd in chemistry and for that reason I need to write a software application to help me with the imaging of samples under a microscope. This microscope is fitted with an x-y-z nanopositioning stage. The stage is controlled using an unmanaged DLL written in VC++ by the hardware vendor. I could provide you with more specifics of needed but let me start with this;
One of the methods in the dll allows me to read settings for the axis of motion:
C++ syntax:
BOOL E7XX_qSVO (int ID, const char* szAxes, BOOL* pbValueArray)
Where BOOL is int 0 or 1 according to the convention.
My C# wrapper contains:
[DllImport("E7XX_GCS_DLL.dll", EntryPoint = "E7XX_qSVO")]
public static extern int qSVO(int iId, string sAxes, int []iValArray);
This seems correct to me. However when I try something like this in my main application (to query axis 1,2 and 3):
Int32 [] _iValues = new Int32[3];
E7XXController.qSVO(m_iControllerID, "123", _iValues);
I consistently get an array like this:
{6, 0, 10} while I should get {0, 0 , 0} according to the display on the device itself. The complementary function:
BOOL E7XX_SVO (int ID, const char* szAxes, const BOOL* pbValueArray) to set the same status bits on the stage also don't work...
Other commands in the dll work perfectly. I can pass strings and doubles in and out without troublem but not the BOOL type...
Do you guys have any idea what could be wrong?
BOOL in C++ is actually an "int" so make sure you use System.Int32 and not System.Boolean. Alternatively it might be using COM data types i.e. VARIANT_BOOL, in which case you need do need System.Boolean. Have you tried running dependency viewer to confirm the function prototype?
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With