On Sun, Oct 28, 2012 at 11:27:25AM -0600, we recorded a bogon-computron collision of the <ru...@bogodyn.org> flavor, containing: > > 3) SPICE (and ng-spice) always uses the first character of a device line to > determine the type of the device. While most designers will draw a > circuit with an IC in it and give the IC a name like "U1", the character > "u" in the first position on a device line means "lossy transmission line" > in spice, not "IC." Thus, in your netlist you're simply telling the > simulator to create a lossy transmission line using nodes "0", "4", "3" > and "+9v" as its four ports, and it's getting confused by all the extra > parameters on the line.
My mistake. "U" is the Uniform Lossy RC line, not the lossy transmission line. The URC device takes 3 nodes and a model name, and so it's used 0, 4, and 3 as the nodes, and then gotten confused about the unknown model named "+9v". It then gets confused about the remaining parameters on the line. Point remains the same, you can't specify an IC named "U1" in a spice netlist by calling the device U1. You need to use an X subcircuit instantiation line and an associated .subckt subcircuit definition. -- Tom Russo KM5VY SAR502 DM64ux http://www.swcp.com/~russo/ Tijeras, NM QRPL#1592 K2#398 SOC#236 http://kevan.org/brain.cgi?DDTNM "And, isn't sanity really just a one-trick pony anyway? I mean all you get is one trick, rational thinking, but when you're good and crazy, oooh, oooh, oooh, the sky is the limit!" --- The Tick _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"