Stuart Brorson wrote: >>On Wed, Sep 21, 2005 at 07:19:59AM +0200, Berni Joss wrote: >> >>>On Wed, Sep 21, 2005 at 12:59:27AM -0400, H.S. wrote: >>> >>>>The other method of course is to put these plotting commands in a >>>>separate file, called foo.cmd, and copy them into ngspice whenever I >>>>want to repeat a simulation. >>> >>>I have never used ngspice - and failed finding a reference manual in a >> >> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >> >>>brief amount of time - but assume it provides an INCLUDE or similar >> >>Typical disease of some free software "products". The creator assumes >>that all people on the Earth have the knowledge necessary to use the >>program already inborn. > > > The SPICE netlister (and specifically spice-sdb) is more of the most > extensively documented facilities in gEDA. A simple Google search > (keywords "spice geda") will turn up more info about spice-sdb in > particular -- and SPICE in general -- than Carter has little white > pills. > > Nothing, unfortunately, prevents total newbies from trying a > complicated program for 20 seconds, and then posting a clueless > question before trying Google. That's just life. My experience at
Just to put the record straight (just in case), I did try google a little. Which made me try the spice-directive-1.sym and spice-model-1.sym from "spice" library components in gschem. These allowed me to include a file, or so it seems since I couldn't make it to work for I couldn't find detailed documentation on these components on the web. So, yes I am a newbie, but not clueless. I did try google, but maybe not *thoroughly*. There is a whole lot of documentation about spice, but I haven't been able to find a whole lot on gschem. Will give yours a try. ->HS
