I think that is exactly what the scope should do. If there are multiple triggers within one frame-time of the screen it should show all the events within this time, no? I thought that is what intensity grading is based on. So if you have two qualified trigger events within 16ms (assuming 60Hz LCD refresh rate; I know this is simplified ) then I would like to see both, no? Or should one just be thrown away? Do i miss something?
Michael
Seems like the answer then is triggering on what you want to see rather than randomly triggering on edges to see data or performing single shot captures rather than forcing trigger while it's sampling normally.
I understand now what are you saying, and no, it doesn't work that way. You have a trigger, then scope
disables triggering, it scans full screen to the end,
rearms trigger, and waits for new trigger condition.
There cannot be several trigger events on same screen scan. Signal cannot be two different signals at the same time. You can have only one signal value at any given point in time.
If you have a fast scope and fast triggers and persistence on screen (simulating phosphorus), you will see multiple waveforms on the same screen, but because of eye or screen persistence, not because those events happened at the same time. It only looks to you they did. They happened sequentially. With sometimes quite long pauses in between. Hence waveforms (screen, buffers) per second metrics on the scopes.
You cannot have another trigger while scanning on first trigger. It negates point of oscilloscope being oscilloscope, device that shows voltage variation in time domain.
And on digital scope you have last waveform that happened in the buffer to see.
If you want to capture number of separate captures and keep them all, you need to have a scope with segmented memory and switch it on.
But they will be kept separately, and you can look at them (and decode them) separately. On some scopes you can chose to overlap all recorded segments and see them at the same time, but that is not normal scope view, but a special analysis mode.