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Editor overview

Pepijn de Vos edited this page Jul 8, 2022 · 10 revisions

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This is the main editing window, typically accessed by opening a schematic from the library manager. The main drawing area is a grid where devices and wires can be placed. At the top are the available tools. On the left are devices that can be placed, and on the right are the properties of the selected device.

Important: do not forget to add a ground node to your schematic. Without it the simulator will give mysterious errors. A ground node can be placed by pressing g or long-pressing the label/port icon in the left sidebar to reveal the ground and supply port types.

See also: keyboard shortcuts

Editing area

The Mosaic editing area uses a fixed, course grid, which makes it very easy to align elements and avoid accidental errors from things that look connected but aren't.

In the default theme, every element has a backdrop to easily distinguish different types. Passive elements are green, power sources are yellow, subcircuits are grey, N-channel devices are blue, P-channel devices are red, and selected items are purple, with their ports highlighted in red.

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Wires are made up of straight segments. Selecting a wire segment gives it a dashed line. Double-clicking a wire segment, selects all connected wires. Hovering over a wire gives it an outline, so its endpoints can be easily identified.

When more than two wire ends meet in the same tile, a dot is shown to indicate a connection. When wire midpoints cross each other, no connection is formed, and no dot is shown. When a port or wire is not connected to anything, a dashed red outline is shown.

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When a device port or wire end meets the midpoint of a wire, the wire is split up in segments. Unstable care must be taken when moving devices, split segments remain split, and could potentially cause unexpected connections when trying to cross over the segment endpoints with another wire.

When a wire is drawn "through" a device, that is, a new wire crossing multiple ports of the same device, the wire is split at the ports, and the middle section removed. This allows quickly hooking up passives by drawing wires through them.

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