Le 07/09/2017 à 21:53, Andrey Kuznetsov a écrit :
> I can't seem to drag tracks in cairo or openGL in latest nightly pcbnew,
> dragging only works in legacy.
>
> Using Windows.
>
> Can someone check please?
> --
It works for me (using W7)
--
Jean-Pierre CHARRAS
I use KDevelop under Linux for building and debugging. It works pretty well
with cmake.
2017-09-08 7:07 GMT+02:00 Bernhard Stegmaier :
> You can run it from build directory also on macOS, no need to install (I
> do this all the time).
> You have to run the project manager (=> kicad.app) and eesch
You can run it from build directory also on macOS, no need to install (I do
this all the time).
You have to run the project manager (=> kicad.app) and eeschema, pcbnew, etc.
from there.
Running standalone binaries won’t work.
Regards,
Bernhard
> On 8. Sep 2017, at 03:38, Jon Evans wrote:
>
>
Terry,
If you like IDEs, clion works pretty great with KiCad in my
experience. It requires cmake, so it has pretty great cmake support
:)
Adam Wolf
On Thu, Sep 7, 2017 at 8:48 PM, Terry Gray wrote:
> Well, I think that is where the development environment comes in. I am in
> Linux and use num
And if you want something free, Qt Creator is actually pretty decent (and
supports cmake).
On Thu, Sep 7, 2017 at 9:55 PM, Adam Wolf
wrote:
> Terry,
>
> If you like IDEs, clion works pretty great with KiCad in my
> experience. It requires cmake, so it has pretty great cmake support
> :)
>
> Ada
Well, I think that is where the development environment comes in. I am
in Linux and use number of different IDE's: Code::Blocks, CodeLight,
Eclipse CDT, etc. In most of these, when the project is set up inside
the IDE, when debugging you can edit the source in the same buffer as
the debugger
On Linux you can run the binaries from the project directory (or at least,
I can). So on my Linux machines I can build and debug individual parts .
On MacOS I do have to run make install like you say, but then can debug
things from my temporary install directory. What do you mean by edit
interact
Many developers develop on Linux, some develop on Windows, and only a
few develop on MacOS.
Adam Wolf
On Thu, Sep 7, 2017 at 8:32 PM, Terry Gray wrote:
> As a new addition to this group I have a question. What are the prevalent
> dev. environments used by the primary Kicad developers. This migh
As a new addition to this group I have a question. What are the
prevalent dev. environments used by the primary Kicad developers. This
might seem an inconsequential query, but I have a good reason for
asking. As far as I can discern (and I am hoping you guys can help
clear this up for me) the
Why not just change eeschema to assume a missing text size is 0.060, and
always write the text size. Then use 0.050 as the default size for new
items. that way it is both forward and backward compatible.
On Thu, Sep 7, 2017 at 5:44 PM, Oliver Walters <
oliver.henry.walt...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Way
Wayne,
So are you saying that if a text item has a default text size (hard-coded
to 0.060") then this text size will *not* be written to the file? i.e. an
omitted text field size means "use default size"?
Oliver
On Fri, Sep 8, 2017 at 4:30 AM, Wayne Stambaugh
wrote:
> If you change the default
Hi macOS guys,
does anyone see this kind of problems?
For me it is 100% reproducible on all my machines (on 10.12.x), both with my
own builds and with one of the latest official nightlies.
It starts exactly with this change
https://git.launchpad.net/kicad/commit/eeschema?id=352919658da483142ec
I can't seem to drag tracks in cairo or openGL in latest nightly pcbnew,
dragging only works in legacy.
Using Windows.
Can someone check please?
--
Remember The Past, Live The Present, Change The Future
Those who look only to the past or the present are certain to miss the
future [JFK]
kandre..
Le 07/09/2017 à 19:55, Wayne Stambaugh a écrit :
> On 9/7/2017 5:29 AM, Bastian Neumannn wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I ususlly work with schematics of around 5 to 15 pages. A3 sized that
>> is. Using A4 for schematics that easily bloats up to 30 pages.
>>
>> For those schematics I am not using KiCad since
If you change the default text size, then users schematics will appear
differently the next time they open their schematics and they will have
to go back an change them back to .060" which will change their file(s).
Will users even notice? I don't know but if they do, I'll bet they
wont be happy
On 9/7/2017 5:29 AM, Bastian Neumannn wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I ususlly work with schematics of around 5 to 15 pages. A3 sized that
> is. Using A4 for schematics that easily bloats up to 30 pages.
>
> For those schematics I am not using KiCad since they are in a
> professional environment.
>
> Given th
Hello, Bastian!
I like your ideas as well.
But this Widget could contain much more information that I would call it i.e.
"Design Explorer".
You can have your schematics in a tree view covering the hierarchical schematic
pages as you suggest.
But then you could also browse your design by Componen
I personally (as a user) find the icons visually more intuitive. Specially
for newcomers and better adoption of KiCad.
I know it's out of some guidelines, but this is a very complex software.
My feeling is that it's better with a "on" by default setting, as long as
people already used to the soft
Hi,
Sorry to bring this up again, but for me icons are still enabled by default
on macOS (and Windows unsurprisingly). I deleted /Library/Application
Support/kicad, ~/Library/Preferences/kicad and /Applications/Kicad,
reinstalled from most recent nightly (07-Sep-2017) and the icons were there
upon
Hi Jean-Pierre,
Thank you for the notice. I checked the code, and I think your proposal
is valid. I have already pushed a patch to fix the problem.
Regards,
Orson
On 09/07/2017 09:04 AM, jp charras wrote:
> Hi Orson,
>
> Could you have a look into your commit
> a3fc0ef658db69d601f7c91e41c91f43
Hi,
the big designs are mostly mainboards with on board CPU for networking and
communications. sometimes there are FPGAs there as well.
We use a software called Zuken for that.
I like the Symbols and net idea as well I will keep it in mind.
Cheers,
Basti
2017-09-07 11:59 GMT+02:00 Simon Küpper
Hi Bastian,
I like this idea. The ability to leave the widget open and have it remain
on top whilst interacting with the schematic will be useful as well.
Another CAD package I have used has two items under each sheet/block,
labelled "Symbols" and "Nets", where double clicking on it would bring u
I like the idea that you have posed. I guess this is meant for the
eeschema rewrite that is scheduled in the future?
Out of curiousity, what kind of monster designs are you doing that
require 40 A3 sheets of paper? :-D motherboards? huge FPGA boards?
Am 07.09.2017 um 11:29 schrieb Bastian Neuma
Hi,
I ususlly work with schematics of around 5 to 15 pages. A3 sized that is.
Using A4 for schematics that easily bloats up to 30 pages.
For those schematics I am not using KiCad since they are in a professional
environment.
Given the situation that I am currently working on a big design in KiCa
Hi Orson,
Could you have a look into your commit a3fc0ef658db69d601f7c91e41c91f43880c1ab0?
It fixes a memory leak by adding and calling deleteTemplates() which delete the
footprint list in
memory.
However, because it is called each time EAGLE_PLUGIN::init is called, the
loaded library is in fa
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