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In 2000, EAGLE version 4.0 officially dropped support for DOS and OS/2, but now being based on Qt 3 [9] [10] it added native support for Windows and was among the first professional electronic CAD tools available for Linux. [11] A 32-bit DPMI version of EAGLE 4.0 running under DOS [nb 1] was still available on special request in order to help ...
List of free analog and digital electronic circuit simulators, available for Windows, macOS, Linux, and comparing against UC Berkeley SPICE. The following table is split into two groups based on whether it has a graphical visual interface or not.
This setup has been tested with Ubuntu 11.04 (64-bit). A notable feature of Target 3001! is its ability to support reverse engineering. Users can derive a circuit drawing from a photograph of an existing circuit board through the traced layout. A special branch of the program is the ASIC Designer, which allows design of integrated circuits.
Dia has special objects to help draw entity-relationship models, Unified Modeling Language (UML) diagrams, flowcharts, network diagrams, and simple electrical circuits. It is also possible to add support for new shapes by writing simple XML files, using a subset of Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) to draw the shape.
XCircuit is a schematic capture program for drawing publication-quality VLSI electrical circuit schematic diagrams and related figures. It's part of the Open Circuit Design tools. It's primarily intended for ULSI/VLSI IC design and not for PCB design, the latter though is still possible. [2]
In 2016, LTspice XVII was released, and is currently the latest version. [6] It is designed to run on 32-bit or 64-bit editions of Windows 7, 8, 8.1, 10, and macOS 10.9+. [2] Summary of major changes from LTspice IV to LTspice XVII are: Add 64-bit executables. [6] Add Unicode characters in schematics, netlists, plot. [6]
KiCad schematic editor for schematic capture KiCad PCB editor for board layout and design KiCad 3D viewer showing both VRML and IDF features on a demo board KiCad 3D viewer. KiCad uses an integrated environment for all of the stages of the design process: Schematic capture, PCB layout, Gerber file generation/visualization, and library editing.
CircuitLogix supports analog, digital, and mixed-signal circuits, and its SPICE simulation gives accurate real-world results. The graphic user interface allows students to quickly and easily draw, modify and combine analog and digital circuit diagrams. CircuitLogix was first launched in 2005, and its popularity has grown quickly since that time.