Den 2010-12-24 11:30:52 skrev Peter TB Brett <peter@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
Actually we used both the symbols at school (many years agoâ), but for different purposes. We used the âââ/\/\/\/âââ symbol when drawing a âberÃkningsschemaââ sorry, I don't have a clue what that is in English, but perhaps something like âschematics for calculationsâ or something like that? I don't know why we use different symbols in different situations though.On Friday 24 December 2010 10:27:20 Johnny Rosenberg wrote:Den 2010-12-24 00:53:38 skrev Stefan Salewski <mail@xxxxxxxxxxxx>: > On Fri, 2010-12-24 at 00:38 +0100, Stefan Salewski wrote: >> On Fri, 2010-12-24 at 00:31 +0100, Johnny Rosenberg wrote: >> > Value: â Enter â390kâ. >> > >> > Does it look nice? It certainly does not on my system. >> > >> > Am I doing this right at all? > > Ah, now I understand you problem: > > You want to place the text inside the box of the (german) rectangular > resister box.Is it German? I didn't know that. That's the symbol I've used all my life(I'm Swedish). Thought it was at least European standard (IEC) or something.You're correct, it's an international standard, not restricted to Germany; boxresistors are the standard symbol in the UK too. Peter
-- Kind regards Johnny Rosenberg _______________________________________________ geda-user mailing list geda-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.seul.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/geda-user