0
Coping an external function removes adjustable item
When you copy and past an external function it will remove
Insert an external function (everything is correct)

I copy and paste it, to and another one. And the ability to now adjust this item is removed, and I cant not figure out any way to fix this. Other then deleting the whole group and adding it manually back.

Customer support service by UserEcho
Hello ksilovich,
All adjustable parameters that you have in the external function are located under "Adjust items" in the project tree. See attached pictures.
You then have to create new "Adjust groups" and assign the adjustable parameters to those groups. However, if you create a stripped project-file and create adjust groups with the adjustable parameters from the external function then you can insert that stripped project-file as a "Solution". By doing so your adjust groups are imported with the adjustable parameters intact. Hope this helps 👍
Kind regards,
Christopher Fridstaden
I realise now that I may have answered the wrong question. It's early in the morning and I am tired 😁The information in my previous post is still valid.
If you copy (Ctrl-C) and then paste (Ctrl-V) your external function then the adjustable parameters will not be adjustable anymore. You will then have to assign them to an adjust group manually. But I would advice against copying/pasting external functions and rather add an external function to your project like this in order to keep the parameters adjustable:
the issue i have is i am creating multiple external functions for different items. And for example I have 10 different wiper switches. 80% of the code is the same and it has external function inside them. So I go to copy and paste it to simplify the setup and time it takes to create these.
now I have to copy paste, delete function, re add function and relink everything 100s of times. Would be nice if the adjust parameters stayed linked so I don't have to do double work.
and this is just 1 of 100 switches in creating a database on.