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NI Multisim (formerly MultiSIM) is an electronic schematic capture and simulation program which is part of a suite of circuit design programs, [1] along with NI Ultiboard. Multisim is one of the few circuit design programs to employ the original Berkeley SPICE based software simulation. [ 2 ]
DesignSpark PCB Pro was a paid upgrade from the free DesignSpark PCB software. It was aimed at professional electronic design engineers of SMEs with an expanded feature set compared to the free DesignSpark PCB software. [3] It was discontinued in September 2022 [4] and its features were merged into DesignSpark PCB as part of paid subscription ...
EDA software assists the designer in every step of the design process and every design step is accompanied by heavy test phases. Errors may be present in the high-level code already, such as for the Pentium FDIV floating-point unit bug , or it can be inserted all the way down to physical synthesis, such as a missing wire, or a timing violation .
DipTrace is a proprietary software suite for electronic design automation (EDA) used for electronic schematic capture and printed circuit board layouts. DipTrace has four applications: schematic editor, PCB editor with built-in shape-based autorouter and 3D preview, component editor (schematic symbol), and pattern editor (PCB footprint).
Schematic capture or schematic entry is a step in the design cycle of electronic design automation (EDA) at which the electronic diagram, or electronic schematic of the designed electronic circuit, is created by a designer. This is done interactively with the help of a schematic capture tool also known as schematic editor. [1]
This work has been released into the public domain by its author, Jeffery J. Iliff.This applies worldwide. In some countries this may not be legally possible; if so: Jeffery J. Iliff grants anyone the right to use this work for any purpose, without any conditions, unless such conditions are required by law.
Design Computation Created DC-CAD, a DOS-based Printed Circuit Board and Schematic CAD program that regularly won 'shoot-outs' against better-known names in PCB CAD software. Based in New Jersey; not sure when they started, but their heyday was the late 1980s. I think they folded in the 1990s.
Once the schematic has been made, it is converted into a layout that can be fabricated onto a printed circuit board (PCB). Schematic-driven layout starts with the process of schematic capture. The result is what is known as a rat's nest. The rat's nest is a jumble of wires (lines) criss-crossing each other to their destination nodes.