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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.
LTspice is a SPICE-based analog electronic circuit simulator computer software, produced by semiconductor manufacturer Analog Devices (originally by Linear Technology). [2] It is the most widely distributed and used SPICE software in the industry. [ 6 ]
A small netlist of just a few instances can describe designs with a very large number of instances. For example, suppose definition A is a simple primitive, like a memory cell. Then suppose definition B contains 32 instances of A; C contains 32 instances of B; D contains 32 instances of C; and E contains 32 instances of D.
Lcapy generates high-quality schematics with a semi-automated layout from a netlist using CircuiTikZ. The netlist is augmented with component attributes to indicate component direction, size, color, etc. The schematic can be automatically annotated with symbolic/numeric node voltages, branch currents, etc. derived from solving the circuit.
Ngspice supports parametric netlists (i.e. netlists can contain parameters and expressions). PSPICE compatible parametric macromodels, often released by manufacturers, can be imported as-is into the simulator.
Python, Application Extension Language (proprietary; "AEL") Windows [1] SuSE [1] RHEL [1] CircuitLogix by Logic Design Windows 10 2019-01 Yes Yes, netlist simulation (analog and digital) Yes en: SPICE, Gerber, DXF SPICE, PDF, Gerber, DXF LTspice by Analog Devices (free) Windows, macOS, Wine 24.0.12 2024-08-21 Yes Yes, netlist simulation (analog ...
LTspice software Mike Thomas Engelhardt [ 1 ] is an American computer programmer , author, and entrepreneur. [ 2 ] He is renowned for developing the SPICE -based analog electronic circuit simulator computer software known as LTspice [ 3 ] and QSPICE .
A circuit design language (CDL) is a kind of netlist, a description of an electronic circuit. [1] It is usually automatically generated from a circuit schematic. It is used for electronic circuit simulation and layout versus schematic (LVS) checks. It is similar to SPICE netlists, but with some extensions.