Re: gEDA-user: [OT] vcd file format description

2007-07-02 Thread Udi Finkelstein
VCD stands for "Value Change Dump" http://www-ee.eng.hawaii.edu/~msmith/ASICs/HTML/Verilog/LRM/HTML/15/ch15.2.htm Udi On 7/2/07, Werner Hoch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Hi Karl and all, On Thursday 28 June 2007 22:12, Karl. wrote: > On Thu, Jun 28, 2007 at 07:59:19PM +0200, Werner Hoch wrote:

Re: gEDA-user: [OT] vcd file format description

2007-07-02 Thread Werner Hoch
Hi Karl and all, On Thursday 28 June 2007 22:12, Karl. wrote: > On Thu, Jun 28, 2007 at 07:59:19PM +0200, Werner Hoch wrote: > > gtkwave can read vcd files. The file format looks pretty easy but I > > haven't found a file format description for it. > > I started looking at this for use with gwave,

Re: gEDA-user: [OT] vcd file format description

2007-06-28 Thread al davis
On Thursday 28 June 2007, Karl. wrote: > It turned out that gwave didn't care about missing timesteps > if the data values were unchanged, so the ascii file turned > out to be quite small for my data - I just needed two lines > every time there was a transition. This was good enough (for > me) that

Re: gEDA-user: [OT] vcd file format description

2007-06-28 Thread Karl.
On Thu, Jun 28, 2007 at 07:59:19PM +0200, Werner Hoch wrote: > gtkwave can read vcd files. The file format looks pretty easy but I > haven't found a file format description for it. I started looking at this for use with gwave, but ended up just using plain ascii like this: t b0 b1 b2 b3 b4 b5 b6

Re: gEDA-user: [OT] vcd file format description

2007-06-28 Thread Mike Jarabek
://www.sentex.ca/~mjarabek -- -Original Message- From: Werner Hoch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Thu, 28 Jun 2007 19:59:19 To:gEDA user mailing list Subject: gEDA-user: [OT] vcd file format description Hi all, I

gEDA-user: [OT] vcd file format description

2007-06-28 Thread Werner Hoch
Hi all, I'd like to generate digital waveform files from other data sets. gtkwave can read vcd files. The file format looks pretty easy but I haven't found a file format description for it. Does someone has a pointer to a place where I can look for it? Regards Werner