Thanks, Orestes. I discovered the vdb command and it solve a part of my trouble.
But... I want to put, at same place, current and voltage graph. Current is much smaller then voltage, then I want to multiply the value of current by 50, because this way I can see both as well as. Is there a manner to do it directly from gnucap command? Something like "print ac v(vl) 50*i(rl)"? Regards! Thiago On Fri, Dec 11, 2009 at 12:43 PM, Orestes Mas <[email protected]> wrote: > A Dijous, 10 de desembre de 2009 13:56:12, Thiago de Paiva va escriure: > > Hello, folks! > > > > > > I'm new on gnucap and its my first message in this list. > > > > > > In help-gnucap archive I read instructions like > > > > print db(v(1)) > > You must specify the analysis type (op, dc, tran, ac, fourier) after > "print" > keyword. > > Greetings, > > Orestes. > > > _______________________________________________ > Help-gnucap mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-gnucap > _______________________________________________ Help-gnucap mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-gnucap
