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web_chops | 14 years ago

Circuit lab (https://www.circuitlab.com/) is pretty good too.

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compumike|14 years ago

(Note: I'm a developer of CircuitLab.) It used to surprise me to see just how common it was for people to use general-purpose drawing/diagramming tools for electronics. In fact, Inkscape plus copy+paste is the de-facto schematic tool of choice for the Wikipedia project: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Electron... ! Nothing against Inkscape -- in fact, Inkscape is what we use to prepare symbols for insertion into CircuitLab -- but it really says something about how painful a lot of electronics-specific software must be that users will jump to general purpose vector drawing tools instead.

jacobolus|14 years ago

Feature request: hold down the space bar to get a drag cursor that moves the whole workspace around. (And ideally also hold spacebar + cmd to get a zoom in cursor, spacebar + option for a zoom our cursor.) These controls are used by every Adobe app (and have been widely adopted by other drawing/graphics software) and they’re amazingly useful, because they make it lightning fast to alternate between moving around the canvas and doing whatever else.

ChuckMcM|14 years ago

+1 for CircuitLab.

if you define 'painful' to be 'under powered, needlessly complex, and over priced.' then yes.

Single biggest feature asked for an NEVER delivered, 'solid way to export a schematic to web-useful format' (PNG, GIF, JPG, or SVG).