Exposed Variables
You can set which parameters are “exposed” in the Key Parameters view through adding
or removing XVar blocks. The following is an example of an XVar block:
<XVar variableName>
description = "Description of the variable"
min = minimum value
max = maximum value
</XVar>
The lines in this block are as follows:
- <XVar variableName>
Begins the XVar block for variableName. The variable name here must
exactly match the variable that you are trying to define.
- description
Describes the variable and will appear when the cursor is placed over
the variable name in the Key Parameters view.
- min
This is the minimum value for the variable and is optional. Setting a minimum can
be very useful with certain simulation parameters such as cell size, which can cause
an instability if incorrectly specified.
- max
This is the maximum value for the variable and is optional.
Note
The name of the key parameter will turn red if there is no value given for the
parameter, or if the parameter is not greater than or equal to min and less
than or equal to max, if they are specified.
Primary Variables
The Primary Variables are variables that correspond to the XVar blocks defined in the above
Exposed Variables section. The syntax for setting primary variables is the same as setting
any other user-defined variable:
$ VARIABLENAME = default value
Variable names are generally in all capital letters. If you redefine this value through the
Key Parameters pane, it will overwrite the default value set in the .pre file.
Setting Key Parameters
You can also declare your primary variables right before their respective XVar blocks
and essentially condense the Exposed Variables and Primary Variables sections into one, as
shown below:
$ VARIABLEONE = default value
<XVar VARIABLEONE>
description = "First variable"
min = minimum value
max = maximum value
</XVar>
$ VARIABLETWO = default value
<XVAR VARIABLETWO>
description = "Second variable"
</XVar>
The parameters defined in the sections above then can be passed as the values for global variables
that define your simulation. For example, if you defined a variable named NDIM
as below:
$ NDIM = 3
<XVar NDIM>
description = "Number of simulated dimensions"
min = 3
</XVar>
You could then use this parameter as the value for the global variable dimension
.
For more information on global variables, see either Global Variables or the section on
global variables in VSim Reference.