User`s guide
Link to Requirements in Microsoft Excel Workbooks
2-35
You will link the speed sensor block to the Speed Sensor Failure information in
the Microsoft Excel requirements document.
4
When you browse and select a requirements document, the RMI stores the document
path as specified by the Document file reference option on the Requirements
Settings dialog box, Selection Linking tab.
For information about which setting to use for your working environment, see
“Document Path Storage” on page 5-15.
5
At the Document field, click Browse to locate and open the
slvnvdemo_FuelSys_TestScenarios.xlsx file.
The Document Type field information changes to Microsoft Excel.
6
In the workbook, the Speed sensor failure information is in cells B22:E22. For
the Location (Type/Identifier) field, select Sheet range and in the second field,
enter B22:E22. (The cell range letters are not case sensitive.)
7
Click Apply or OK to create the link.
8
To confirm that you created the link, right-click the speed sensor block and select
Requirements Traceability > 1. “Speed sensor failure”.
The workbook opens, with cells B22:E22 highlighted.
Keep the example model and Microsoft Excel requirements document open.
Link Multiple Model Objects to a Microsoft Excel Workbook
You can use the same technique to link multiple Simulink and Stateflow objects to a
requirement in a Microsoft Excel workbook. The workflow is:
1
In the model window, select the objects to link to a requirement.
2
Right-click one of the selected objects and select Requirements Traceability >
Open Link Editor.
3
When you browse and select a requirements document, the RMI stores the document
path as specified by the Document file reference option on the Requirements
Settings dialog box, Selection Linking tab.
For information about which setting to use for your working environment, see
“Document Path Storage” on page 5-15.