![]() ![]() But I'm not sure if there is any other workflow that will do the same thing.ģb. I've laid out 48 inches worth of circuit breakers at once like this. If I'm about to put in a bunch of circuit breakers, for instance, I'll pull up my little document, see what the spacing is for that component, and then type it into the box. (I'm willing to bet that if you put in a negative value here, it will lay them out right to left, but I've never actually tried it.) I keep a list of 'footprint spacings' just for this purpose. That second option will put them all in a straight line, left to right, at whatever distance you tell it. When you select multiple components, you're given the option of selecting where each one goes, or to input a certain set distance. This command pulls up all of the components and devices in your schematics, gives you a list, and then allows you to place the footprints. ![]() (This is the only workflow that I use for drawing panel builds, so my advice is pretty one-sided here.) To do this, Go to Panel>Insert Component Footprints>Schematic List. (I'm splitting #3 into two answers.) You can insert multiple footprints at once, if you are inserting them from the schematic list. ![]() BUT!!!! Please see the note below about your terminals, and your wish to jumper everything in that one strip.ģa. Second, you could just draw a graphical jumper over top of the terminal strip after it's generated. First, just put in a note that says something along the lines of 'THOU SHALT JUMPER ALL OF THESE THINGIES". If that's not the problem, can you post one of the drawings that has a problem terminal in it?Ģ. Check your schematics and make sure that you're not double-landing any wires on them. I'm not 100% sure on this one, but I'm thinking that these terminals will have more than wire attached to them in the schematic. ![]()
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