Mail Archives: geda-user/2015/08/31/08:34:16
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015, Markus Hitter (mah AT jump-ing DOT de) [via geda-user AT delorie DOT com] wrote:
> Am 31.08.2015 um 11:51 schrieb gedau AT igor2 DOT repo DOT hu:
>> My proposal assumes there is a way a "netlist patch" can be loaded in
>> gschem. Probably the same way as pcb can load a new netlist into an
>> existing/open pcb.
>
> How does a user find out which kind of "patches" are allowed? To know this, the initial netlist has to have all the neccessary informations already, like which pin can be replaced with which other pin and under which conditions. Having all the logic in place one can go just as well without back-annotation.
In my model, the user understands the schematics and can decide. This
is how I do in practice. I'd only provide the technical tools so that the
netlist change infromation I figure during routing is carried back to
gschem by software instead of me remembering them.
So in this model, the initial netlist is not different from our current
netlist in any bit. There's no extra "this could be swapped or remapped"
info encoded in the schematics or in the netlist.
This is a very different approach from DJ's and imposes different
assumptions on the person(s) working on the schematics/layout.
>
> Back-annotation is still possible, of course, but it's then more a user convenience to allow the user to see in gschem which pins were actually used. For those users which actually care about pin usage.
I don't fully understand these two sentences. If you mean that my proposal
is a convenience feature that doesn't fully and generally solve the
mapping problem: yes, that was my original intention.
Regards,
Igor2
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