Yea you kinda need to have your own parts designed to have it all work like expected I guess but I did find the move command if anyone is interested.
To move a resistor named R1 its move R1 (X Y)
Yea you kinda need to have your own parts designed to have it all work like expected I guess but I did find the move command if anyone is interested.
To move a resistor named R1 its move R1 (X Y)
I've been using eagle a bit, and I have found it necessary to build a number of devices. It's a bit of a struggle at first, but once it's done it's done.
Since we're on this subject, does anyone know a way of automatically filling in space on circuit boards? I make my own boards, so the less copper I etch away the better. As of now I have to put in a bunch of squares and triangles manually, and when I want to change something on the board, I have erase many of them and put them back. Now that I think of it, there may be a way to do this with photoshop or something just before printing the negative (basically draw black lines around all objects). Any thoughts?
I've used P.C Logic - Circuit Layout for several years but they went out of business.
I found Eagle had too difficult a learning curve, plus it's costly for the fully featured versions.
I've been looking for something easy to learn and inexpensive, yet with advanced features. I found it in Sprint - Layout. Among its features is automatic ground planes with user settable clearance - a single mouse click turns it on or off. It doesn't allow precise X,Y placement of parts but, when necessary, it's quick and simple to break a part into individual entities which can be placed by X,Y and then regroup the individual entities. There's a demo version but I didn't try it so cannot tell you its limitations. The learning curve was a matter of minutes. At $50, it is an amazing bargain.
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