Can a batch macro loop like an iterative and call itself again and produce output? I attempted to set up this macro as iterative but it accused me of not having an iteration applied, but the questions were all answered.
I then told it that it is now a batch macro, and it processed itself one time from running the main workflow, but did not loop or repeat. I have included a screen shot of the macro itself. Maybe the fault can be found in its construction(?)
In the previous version 1.0 workflow, this process you have before you was replicated 20 times - in the main workflow - not as a macro, but that is not enough replications to process all the potential data and the workflow is becoming too big aside from just being bad practice. I know there's a better way.
Any suggestions are appreciated.
Chris
"I attempted to set up this macro as iterative but it accused me of not having an iteration applied, but the questions were all answered. "
In the interface designer (when this was an iterative macro), did you specify which output and input should be linked together? The above sounds like the kind of error message you would get if you hadn't done that.
Ben
I answered all the Questions mapping the fields, and even set them to the data type suggested. Same error message, The iteration input "" is not present.
When I set it up as a batch macro, I get one pass-through with output, but no more after that.
Hi @Archaeopteryx,
If you want to incorporate both the control parameter customization of batch macros and the looping of iterative macros, I'd recommend nesting an iterative macro inside your batch macro (or vice versa, if that doesn't work for your use case). If you use an interface tool to bring the piece to customize to the configuration window on the outside of the macro tool, I believe you'll still be able to connect the control parameter to it. I hope this helps!
Hi clmc9601
Thank you for your reply. Can you show me what that would look like? If you have a look at my screen shot of the macro, I have the False path of a filter serve as "re-input" to the first filter tool's inlet. The grouping being the next increment of a counter variable used to label the outputs of each iteration of the macro.
This can be a nested macro or batch macro with detour to make sure it satisfies the looping condition and can come out after reaching the limitation
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