Simulating simple electric circuits

Bjoern Schliessmann usenet-mail-0306.20.chr0n0ss at spamgourmet.com
Wed May 9 09:58:34 EDT 2007


Stef Mientki wrote:
> Bjoern Schliessmann wrote:

>> - sources (here begin currents)
>> - ground (here end currents)

> that doesn't bring you anywhere ;-)

It does :)

> Current doesn't start or end at some location,
> current flows through a closed circuit.

The part I omit is the voltage source. All currents I need in my
system flow from plus to ground.

> And let's forget about capacitors, inductors and semi-conductors
> for this moment !

Yep, because I largely don't have any here, only in few special
cases (where I also can use some kind of "current priority").
 
> Here is a simulation package, although designed for MatLab,
> it might give you a good idea of what your need.
>    http://www.swarthmore.edu/NatSci/echeeve1/Ref/mna/MNA6.html

Wow ... Overkill :)

> There are few simulation related packages,
> but not directly suited for electronics
> http://www.mcs.vuw.ac.nz/cgi-bin/wiki/SimPy

I once looked at this, but couldn't find out how to use it with my
problem. :\

> http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/7542
> http://pyastra.sourceforge.net/
> http://www.nelsim.com/scriptsim/python_man.html

Those are all a bit daunting ...
 
> As an little test I wrote a PIC simulator (only core) in Python,
> it's very rough code (generated in a few evenings),
> if you're interested I could look it up.

Thank you for the offer. I'm presently having problems understanding
even the examples, so I'll call in if I get so far.

Regards,


Björn

-- 
BOFH excuse #380:

Operators killed when huge stack of backup tapes fell over.




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