In 2000, EAGLE version 4.0 officially dropped support for DOS and OS/2, but now being based on Qt 3[9][10] it added native support for Windows and was among the first professional electronic CAD tools available for Linux.[11] A 32-bit DPMI version of EAGLE 4.0 running under DOS[nb 1] was still available on special request in order to help support existing customers, but it was not released commercially. Much later, in 2015, a special version of EAGLE 4.09r2 was made available by CadSoft to ease installation under Windows 7.

Since I need a lot of functions very often, it is very handy to have shortcuts. Per default, eagle has some, but there are not good placed. But eagle allows to change them very easy. But attention: these shortcuts are saved in the eaglerc file, which contains all current settings you made. This file is read at the start of eagle too.



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I am not 100% sure if this is possible, as per the terms of Autodesk or cadsoft, but i am looking for someone who has a pro license of Eagle v7 which is not in use anymore, and is willing to sell it to me.

Therefore I am hoping I can buy for a reasonable price a professional license of v7, so I can do it all in v7. Most of the features of v9 i am not using anyway, and if i want to use them, i can always open the project in v9.....

Cadsoft is a German company that is a veritable mecca of software distribution enlightenment. In addition to the reasonably-priced professional PCB design packages ($1200), they have freeware, lite, non-profit, and other intermediate licenses. Their software runs under windows, linux, and MacOSX. It's slightly quirky, with a steep (but not too high) learning curve on the front end, but from most reports it is not any more so than other professional CAD packages. They have online support forums that are active from both the company and other users, the package is under current development and gets better with each release. A number of PCB fabricators will accept their CAD files directly. It's good stuff.

 Use it. Propagate it. Buy it when you "go pro."

Resistors, simple components that they are, cause a lot of confusion for Eagle beginners, perhaps because the eagle library contains 100+ different package/schematic options for generic resistors. Or perhaps it's because a search for short word like "R" isn't practical, and a search for "resistor" turns up a bunch of special purpose specific-manufacturer devices.


The general purpose fixed resistor devices are called either R-US (if you like the US zigzag line type of schematics symbol) or R-EU (if you prefer the European simple rectangle.] The package options are numerous, but make sense after you realize that there's a common format: "WWLL/SS" where WW is the body width, LL is the body length, and SS is the hole spacing, all in truncated millimeters. A typical 1/4W resistor measures about 2.5mm in diameter and 7mm long; hole spacing depends on how you bend the leads. So R-US_0207/10 is a 1/4W resistor with 10mm (actually 4*2.54, or 10.16mm, since we want to stay close to a 0.1 inch (2.54mm) grid.) R-US_0207/2V is the same resistor mounted vertically with 2.54mm lead spacing. 1/8W resistors are similarly designated R-US_0204/SS"


I'm going to pick a vertical package for use on our schematics, though of course it doesn't matter for the schematic drawing anyway. Perhaps I'll do the board layout in a "related" Instructable later...

Capacitors are worse than resistors, largely because their bodies come in a wider variety of shapes (that are less standardized), and of course there are all those different types; disk, ceramic, mylar, film, electrolytic, tantalum, AC filter, etc (and those are just the FIXED value caps!) Again, there are slightly different US and European schematic symbols C-US and C-EU in rcl.lib. Again, there's a plethora of packages, but there's a standard format. In this case it's SSS-WWWXLLL, where SSS is the lead spacing (with an extra digit this time!), WWW is the body width, and LLL is the body length.


Polarized caps are similar (CPOL-US or CPOL-EU in rcl.lbr), with a package name like TSSS-DD, where T is a type designator (E for electrolytics, TT for tantalum drops, for instance) SSS is the spacing again (only now it probably has an actual decimal point!), and DD is the diameter (for radial caps)


Most hobby projects can get away with either 2.5mm or 5mm lead spacing, and the designer "remembering" to leave enough space for the physical capacitor body; there might not be a silkscreen anyway.

 (the "silkscreen" is the pictures and text describing the components, usually printed in white ink on the component side of the board (if you had it made professionally.) Library designers spend a lot of time getting the silkscreen to look nice; all wasted if you make a board that doesn't have that printing.)

When you have parts that aren't going to mount on your actual PCB anyway, such as control knobs and battery packs and switches and lightbulbs and such, you of course have a lot of flexibility in how they are portrayed on the schematic and PCB. You can use single pins for each wire, or find a part whose drawing isn't too obnoxious that has pins of appropriate size and shape for attaching wires as well as an actual component.


The eagle library has *A* "lamp" part. It says it's actually an LED holder, but the drawing is OK and the part has pins suitable for attaching wires that go to off-board lamps, so it looks fine for our purposes.

I personally hated eagle, (as well as kicad) I was forced to use it as a freelancer as thats what some of my clients used. Now I use Diptrace for schematic and pcb. if my clients dont like it, sorry, Im to old for this now, dont use me then

because eagle has been for many many years the professionals choice when they dont want to spend any money there not going to up and change just because some other tool may or may not be better at the timebut i have to disagree about KiCAD i find it to be overly simplified where it should not be and overly complicated where it should be easy and it crashes too muchim also not an altium fan, i have to use it for work and it was back in the day the best tool you can use but they have lagged behind other free suits

The XML schema included in every installation of EAGLE. You can find it in the Doc folder of your installation, the file is called eagle.dtd.As already mentioned you can extract all of the libraries from a board schematic pair by running the exp-lbrs.ulp that comes with EAGLE. In V6 you can run it directly by going File -> Export -> Libraries. be457b7860

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