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From: JosephKK on 22 Jan 2010 21:15 On Thu, 21 Jan 2010 12:11:56 -0700, D Yuniskis <not.going.to.be(a)seen.com> wrote: >WangoTango wrote: >> In article <hj9vf5$idp$1(a)speranza.aioe.org>, not.going.to.be(a)seen.com >> says... >>> WangoTango wrote: >>>> In article <hj88ic$vam$2(a)speranza.aioe.org>, not.going.to.be(a)seen.com >>>> says... >>>>> Hi AL, >>>>> >>>>> LittleAlex wrote: >>>>>> On Jan 19, 1:17 pm, D Yuniskis <not.going.to...(a)seen.com> wrote: >>>>>>> As a side-comment to the schematic preferences thread >>>>>>> (hopefully not another lengthy thread :> ), I'm curious >>>>>>> as to what folks use as an offpage connector symbol. >>>>>> I use a CAD program. It has "input", "output", "bidirectional", and >>>>>> "passive" (none of the above, AKA don't care) for off-page and off- >>>>>> sheet. >>>>>> >>>>>> I've never seen a reason to change them from the default. >>>>> Yes, all of the tools I use do this. I am just not happy >>>>> with their symbol choices. And, since I can change them, >>>>> I have. >>>>> >>>>> E.g., I don't like an output on the right side of the page >>>>> drawn as < >>>>> >>>> I guess your CAD package doesn't have a rotate or flip? >>> Sure! Then you get a symbol that looks like > -- but now >>> the pin connection is on the *right* side of the symbol >>> instead of on the *left* (since this example was describing >>> an offpage connector for an output to be located on the >>> right edge of the page!) >>> >>>> Funny what these guys will forget. ;) >>> Funny how these posters fail to think things through! :) >>> >> OK, well then who makes a symbol that isn't grouped into a cohesive >> unit, or what CAD package can't handle such things? > >Sure. "Create a symbol". I think if you read upthread, >that's where this discussion started. > >> All in/out/bi symbols I have EVER seen are not treated as individual >> parts/lines/primitives. They are a equivalent to a symbol or part that >> is manipulated as a unit. >> So ---> becomes <--- when flipped or rotated. > >Sure! But the PoE moves, also! > >Or, graphically: > >--->X becomes X<--- > >where X is the PoE (i.e., where the signal connects). >If, as I had stipulated in the discussion, you are >creating an output for the right side of the page, >then you really want: > I have not yet found a case where PoE itself was bidirectional. Of course Ethernet itself intrinsically is. It may be that directionality being confused or conflated caused the symbol issues. >--->X > >If you are starting with; > >---<X > >I think you will find "you can't get there from here". > >> ---< becomes >--- rotating around what would be the electrical >> connection point. > >Only if that connection point is located in the *center* >of the symbol. (Many eCAD packages put the PoE's on >the *edge* of the symbol boundary). > >> I guess I assumed you spent more than $1.50 on the software..... :) > >This was OrCAD 9. I'll check Altium/Protel this afternoon >if I get a chance. I know STRIDES would do it correctly >(because I could always move the PoE manually if need be). >I *really* don't want to fire up the Mentor Graphics >workstation to see how *that* does it...
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