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1.1 root 1: .NH
2: A Toy Example.
3: .LP
4: In this section we present a complete example. The design consists of
5: two
6: .SM I/O
7: connectors that route signals from a ribbon cable to a backplane.
8: Here is the schematic, followed by the
9: .CW ".w"
10: file:
11: .PS <toy.pic
12: .nr dP 2 \" delta point size for program
13: .nr dV 2p \" delta vertical for programs
14: .P1
15: .so toy.w.l
16: .P2
17: .LP
18: The comments (introduced by
19: .CW % )
20: are coordinates from the
21: .CW .j
22: file that can be used later to annotate the drawing with pin numbers.
23: Otherwise the
24: .CW .w
25: file is mostly just a compendium of the text strings in the
26: .CW .j
27: file.
28: In order to proceed further, we need a
29: .CW .pins
30: file:
31: .P1
32: .so toy.pins.l
33: .P2
34: .LP
35: It should be fairly obvious what is going on here. Note the appearance of the
36: .I "package type"
37: on the
38: .CW .t
39: lines.
40: Now the
41: .CW .wx
42: file can be made:
43: .P1
44: .so toy.wx.l
45: .P2
46: .LP
47: This is basically a listing, for each chip, of net\ name\-pin\ number pairs.
48: Package types are copied through from the
49: .CW .pins
50: file for use by the physical design tools, and
51: the pin names are left as an aid to humans.
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