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RE: gEDA-user: Pin Numbers
- To: <geda-user@seul.org>
- Subject: RE: gEDA-user: Pin Numbers
- From: <zcab911@goywendt.com>
- Date: Sat, 3 Jul 2004 22:42:45 -0700
- Delivered-to: archiver@seul.org
- Delivered-to: geda-user-outgoing@seul.org
- Delivered-to: geda-user@seul.org
- Delivery-date: Sun, 04 Jul 2004 01:42:56 -0400
- Importance: Normal
- In-reply-to: <1088916318.1923.90.camel@toolbench.cibolo.com>
- Reply-to: geda-user@seul.org
- Sender: owner-geda-user@seul.org
So it sounds like a new symbol is required for every package derivation,
right? For example transistors can come in ebc or bec formats, or
another example are inverters that come in single, dual, tri or hex
versions, all with different packages...
-----Original Message-----
From: <withheld>
Sent: Saturday, July 03, 2004 9:45 PM
To: Zcab911
Subject: Re: gEDA-user: Pin Numbers
> You find the library location in the package you installed, or the
> place you told the source compile to put them, and copy and edit a new
> symbol by a command like:
gschem non-standard-pkg.sym
Use the command to make all atrrib visible,
see pull down menus.
JG
> if I need to use a non-standard package, the only way to do this is to
> create new symbols. Any clues?
>
> --------------------
> Rolf Wendt
> Technology Consulting Services
> --------------------
> Yahoo! & AOL IM: zcab911
>
>