Thank you everyone for responding to my question. Here is my answer to my 
own question...
There's nothing wrong with the GWT translation into JavaScript of Paul 
Falstad's electronic simulator.

After pondering the discourses of Eric Dollard...
http://is.gd/teslaimpulse

...I have come to a better appreciation for what I've managed to do for the 
past year. In some instances, I've merely managed to simulate Tesla's 
impulse current which Eric describes. But in one particular instance, I've 
managed to oscillate impulses which is a requirement for the wireless 
transmission of power using Tesla's Magnifying Transmitter...
http://is.gd/batterycharger

I've also come to appreciate how narrow a window each type of simulator is 
targeted for. It matters what purpose it is intended to be used for I have 
to strain LTSpice to get anything similar...
http://is.gd/spicy_boom

So, now I know what this JavaScript simulator can be used for among a few 
other things. And none of my simulations are ever intended to be built. 
They have been an exercise in learning some behavioral characteristic or 
another of electrodynamics.

And I can not thank Iain Sharp enough for suggesting a JavaScript version 
since it is only in this format that this simulator allows me to do what 
I've done in such a remarkable way.
And many thanks to Paul for building the original in Java.

On Tuesday, January 30, 2018 at 5:39:23 AM UTC-8, Vinyasi wrote:
>
> Paul Falstad makes available to developers his Java source code for his 
> electronic simulator...
> https://github.com/pfalstad/circuitjs1
>
> Using the Eclipse (Neon) platform coupled with the GWT app from Google to 
> translate Paul's source code into JavaScript has produced a strange anomaly.
>
> If I run the exact same circuit in his original Java version...
> http://www.falstad.com/circuit-java/
>
> ...I get very different results, sometimes, then if I run the same circuit 
> in his JavaScript version...
> http://www.falstad.com/circuit/
>
> The difference is phenomenal. Infinite gain on some circuits is possible - 
> some so suddenly, that it can be very surprising...
> http://vinyasi.info/ne?startCircuit=capboom.txt
>
> He never wrote his simulator with JavaScript in mind. Nor does he 
> participate in its translation from its originally coded version in Java. 
> Yet, electronics theory gets turned on its head whenever I spend countless 
> hours developing my own circuits that defy conventional wisdom!
>
> For example...
> http://vinyasi.info/ne?startCircuit=infinite-gain.txt
>
> Anyone have any idea what might be occurring?
>
> Thanks.
>

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "GWT 
Users" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/google-web-toolkit.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to