> Can you point me at some code to follow? Like perhaps a working plug-in
> that I could gut and use for a skeleton?
I have a couple here:
http://www.delorie.com/pcb/
They're both action plug-ins, so if you wanted to model
them, you'd invoke your plug-in like this:
:ImportDXF(
Can you point me at some code to follow? Like perhaps a working plug-in
that I could gut and use for a skeleton?
-dave
DJ Delorie wrote:
Write a plug-in that reads the dxf and adds the items to the existing
"outline" layer.
It's far easier to just call the internal API than to create a .pcb
f
Write a plug-in that reads the dxf and adds the items to the existing
"outline" layer.
It's far easier to just call the internal API than to create a .pcb
file and try to merge it.
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Jeremy Pedersen wrote:
despite it being installed in both /usr/local/lib
and (an older version installed by emerge on my Gentoo Linux machine) in
/usr/lib, it still will not compile. Any ideas?
What environment variables am I most likely to need to set?
[jg]The makefile tells you each time in
Very interesting thread. Taking it a little off topic...
A question that has come up in the past is the idea of importing data
from a mechanical package to get board outline, etc. As it turns out,
I'm working on another project where I have been using dxflib, which is
a C++ dxf reading librar
Peter,
Ok, that sounds doable. I will check out the latest stuff from CVS and try
to compile it.
You guys are the greatest. :)
Thanks,
Jeremy
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On Mon, 2007-02-05 at 18:10 -0500, Jeremy Pedersen wrote:
> >Check out the whole gaf tree. Run "make" and follow the directions,
> >then "make install". It all works together very nicely. There's a
> >couple of environment variables you have to set.
>
> I take it that's in CVS. I've not really
Check out the whole gaf tree. Run "make" and follow the directions,
then "make install". It all works together very nicely. There's a
couple of environment variables you have to set.
I take it that's in CVS. I've not really used CVS before, but I suppose I
could give it a shot.
What environm
> it to compile. I installed libgeda locally in /usr/local/lib using
> ./configure, make, make install, but gschem still complains that it
Check out the whole gaf tree. Run "make" and follow the directions,
then "make install". It all works together very nicely. There's a
couple of environment
On Feb 5, 2007, at 5:50 PM, Jeremy Pedersen wrote:
That much I know. :-) If I want custom footprints I'll be sure to
make 'em. I just wish I could figure out how the heck I can tell
how big in "mils" a component is. I don't know where to find sizes
of components (data sheet?),
Packaging
CVS head.
Oh. I guess a lot has happened since the release I'm using. I would really
like to upgrade to a newer version of gschem at a minimum, but I can't get
it to compile. I installed libgeda locally in /usr/local/lib using
./configre, make, make install, but gschem still complains that it c
> Hmm...what version do you use? I am stuck with 20060123.
CVS head.
> >Additionally, *learn* to make your own newlib footprints.
>
> Right-O. I've done one before while following along with the gsch2pcb
> tutorial, so I could probably do one.
It's easy for this. Use PCB itself! Create six v
You should rename the symbol if you're changing it, just in case some
tool picks the wrong one.
Oh, I should have mentioned. I had renamed the copy to
slotted-resistor.symalready, so no troubles there.
You could create a new symbol that has five resistors in a box, with
one side common.
That
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:geda-user-
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of DJ Delorie
> Sent: Monday, February 05, 2007 1:21 PM
> To: geda-user@moria.seul.org
> Subject: Re: gEDA-user: Drawing a schematic with a single-inline
> resistornetwork
>
> > Any time I try
On Mon, 05 Feb 2007 04:58:50 +, Michael Sokolov wrote:
> The 2nd picture is what I want the PCB house to see (so that they don't
> cut where they shouldn't), but while doing the layout I prefer to see
> the 1st picture on my screen.
I'd draw the additional line in silk.
So it does not hurt i
> Then I remembered that those op-amps were slotted, so I added a
> numslots=5 (the single inline package contains five resistors)
> statement to the resistor-1.sym file, and slotdef lines for each of
> those slots. But when I went to assign a slot=1 line to the .sym
> file, gschem segfaulted!
Do
Hello,
Some of you gave me great advice when I posted an earlier thread about the
MilesTag project's PCB's having been drawn in ExpressPCB. Most of you
suggested that I should redraw the schematics and boards in gEDA as a
learning experience, and I took this advice to heart.
While it has been fu
Scott Dattalo wrote:
Stuart's tutorials on using SPICE with gaf are well written and easy
to follow. Unfortunately, they need to be updated. Specifically,
loading the schematics in gEDA/examples/RF_Amp (which are packaged in
the 20061020 gaf release), give warnings like:
Loading schematic
[/
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