Difference between revisions of "Making a Schematic in Eagle"
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(Created page with "PCB design in EAGLE ( and not only) is a two-step process. First you design your schematic, then you lay out a PCB based on that schematic. EAGLE's board and schematic editors...") |
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PCB design in EAGLE ( and not only) is a two-step process. First you design your schematic, then you lay out a PCB based on that schematic. EAGLE's board and schematic editors work hand-in-hand. A well-designed schematic is critical to the overall PCB design process. It will help you catch errors before the board is fabricated, and it'll help you debug a board when something doesn't work. | PCB design in EAGLE ( and not only) is a two-step process. First you design your schematic, then you lay out a PCB based on that schematic. EAGLE's board and schematic editors work hand-in-hand. A well-designed schematic is critical to the overall PCB design process. It will help you catch errors before the board is fabricated, and it'll help you debug a board when something doesn't work. | ||
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+ | [[File:EAGLE schematic.png | 1100 px]] | ||
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+ | =Understanding schematics= | ||
+ | Before we begin, you have to make sure you have a good idea about schematics, how to read those. So here is [https://learn.sparkfun.com/tutorials/how-to-read-a-schematic a tutorial] | ||
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+ | =Creating a schematic= |
Revision as of 11:43, 25 November 2020
PCB design in EAGLE ( and not only) is a two-step process. First you design your schematic, then you lay out a PCB based on that schematic. EAGLE's board and schematic editors work hand-in-hand. A well-designed schematic is critical to the overall PCB design process. It will help you catch errors before the board is fabricated, and it'll help you debug a board when something doesn't work.
Understanding schematics
Before we begin, you have to make sure you have a good idea about schematics, how to read those. So here is a tutorial