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PLC and HMI Development with Siemens TIA Portal

You're reading from  PLC and HMI Development with Siemens TIA Portal

Product type Book
Published in Apr 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801817226
Pages 436 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Liam Bee Liam Bee
Profile icon Liam Bee

Table of Contents (21) Chapters

Preface 1. Section 1 – The TIA Portal – Project Environment
2. Chapter 1: Starting a New Project with TIA Portal 3. Chapter 2: Creating Objects and How They Fit Together 4. Chapter 3: Structures and User-Defined Types 5. Section 2 – TIA Portal – Languages, Structures, and Configurations
6. Chapter 4: PLC Programming and Languages 7. Chapter 5: Working with Languages in TIA Portal 8. Chapter 6: Creating Standard Control Objects 9. Chapter 7: Simulating Signals in the PLC 10. Chapter 8: Options to Consider When Creating PLC Blocks 11. Section 3 – TIA Portal – HMI Development
12. Chapter 9: TIA Portal HMI Development Environment 13. Chapter 10: Placing Objects, Settings Properties, and Events 14. Chapter 11: Structures and HMI Faceplates 15. Chapter 12: Managing Navigation and Alarms 16. Section 4 – TIA Portal – Deployment and Best Practices
17. Chapter 13: Downloading to the PLC 18. Chapter 14: Downloading to the HMI 19. Chapter 15: Programming Tips and Additional Support 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

This chapter has explored faceplates and how to create an interface and use a faceplate. By building frameworks and standard objects that use faceplates, UDTs, and standard program blocks, the ease with which projects can be developed increases significantly.

When working with faceplates, it is important to remember that they are encapsulated and have no access to HMI tags or global scripts. In order to use a faceplate, the interface needs to be set up appropriately. It's also worth noting that faceplates must be created in the Project library, and only released faceplates can actually be used in a screen. Similarly, in order to modify a faceplate, the typed version must be edited in the Project library.

The next chapter covers navigation and alarms in the Unified environment. This includes how to raise, accept, and clear alarms, and the differences between PLC-driven alarming and conventional alarming.

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