Hi,
From your picture it looks like you have used lines to connect your
components. You need to use nets, put the mouse cursor over one of the red
dots on the ends of the pins, and hit 'n'. Draw the nets between the pins like
this to make electrical connections.
When two nets cross without a connection, they will just intersect. When the
end of one net touches another, a round red dot will automatically appear. Open
ends on nets will have a square dot on them so you can see where the ends are
not connecting.
A common drawing style to help a reader of your shematic determine if two
nets should be conected is to never connect four nets at the same point. Always
stagger the nets apart so you get two round dots. Reserve the case where two
nets just cross over each other for just that. (This is the situation that you
used the arc to jump over your other net)
Hope this helps. I think there is a getting started guide on the wiki for you.
--------------------------------------------------
Mike Jarabek
FPGA/ASIC Designer, DSP Firmware Designer
http://www.sentex.ca/~mjarabek
--------------------------------------------------
-----Original Message-----
From: william estrada <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mon, 02 Apr 2007 15:03:08
To:[email protected]
Subject: gEDA-user: 4-bit_12-LED.png (PNG Image, 1024x768 pixels)
Hi guys,
I have made my first drawing using gEDA. I have some questions about
using gEDA. In the drawing I used an 'arc' to jump over one of the
'traces'. Is the a better way to show that lines are not connected?
http://64.124.13.3/PIC_Projects/4-bit_12-LED.png
--
William Estrada
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Mt-Umunhum-Wireless.net ( 64.124.13.3 )
_______________________________________________
geda-user mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.seul.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/geda-user
_______________________________________________
geda-user mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.seul.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/geda-user