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Date:      Thu, 7 Jul 2005 12:16:46 -0700 (PDT)
From:      Garrett Cooper <youshi10@u.washington.edu>
To:        =?ISO-8859-15?Q?Bj=F6rn_K=F6nig?= <bkoenig@cs.tu-berlin.de>
Cc:        simon@comsys.ntu-kpi.kiev.ua, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Electrical circuits simulator
Message-ID:  <Pine.A41.4.61b.0507071215340.126156@dante68.u.washington.edu>
In-Reply-To: <42CD651A.5070202@cs.tu-berlin.de>
References:  <20050707102451.GA222@pm514-9.comsys.ntu-kpi.kiev.ua> <23017470050707083439ac40bd@mail.gmail.com> <42CD651A.5070202@cs.tu-berlin.de>

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PSpice and Candence are the only circuit simulators that I know of with 
GUIs, and PSpice is for Windows only where I think that Cadence requires 
purchasing a license (not sure though... look for Cadence on google). I 
will say that Cadence is a powerful extension of Spice though.
-Garrett

On Thu, 7 Jul 2005, [ISO-8859-15] Björn König wrote:

> Shantanoo wrote:
>
>> I haven't check Oregano. But for electrical circuit simulation 'spice'
>> is nice :)
>
> I used spice too for a few weeks only. It's very powerful, but as far as I 
> know it has no GUI (everybody wants a GUI ;-p) and in my opinion it's very 
> hard to learn quickly without a printed documentation and without lots of 
> examples.
>
> By the way, I suggest 'chipmunk' if you want to build circuits with gates, 
> simple controllers, segment displays and so on.
>
> Björn
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