CHANGED abandon the unpredictable behaviour of the Simulation Command
dialog. You now separately add simulation tabs (which have invariant
command types once created), and the dialog edits the current tab.
Also a bunch of bug fixes to make multiple simulation plots actually
work.
A sheetpath is required to correctly resolve text variables.
Depending on currentSheet is rife with bugs.
There are many places where we do *not* want to be prepending
field names to the field values, such as netlisting,
building PDF hypertext menus, etc.
Also, Find/Replace needs to work on unresolved text, as
that's what we're going to display (and if replace nuked
your variable references you wouldn't be happy).
The netlist exporter was never updated to exclude symbols that are
tagged as power symbols. Only the legacy power symbol name prefix
('#') was used as the power symbol check. Power symbols no longer
require the '#' name prefix.
- Ensure that critical paths (ERC/netlister) are fully-rechecked
- Handle symbol/pin distinction in change markers
- Fully connect hierarchical pins in one pass descending
* Add compare method to COLOR4D object.
* Add unit test to validate COLOR4D comparison method.
* Add missing color test in text attribute comparison method.
* Add unit test for text attribute object.
* Remove unnecessary headers from text attribute header.
* Move text attribute code into separate source file.
1) More REPORTER, less exception processing
2) Remove UI calls from SPICE_MODEL
3) Don't replace netlist with errors; show both
4) Don't bail out of netlist generation after single error
Fixes https://gitlab.com/kicad/code/kicad/issues/14295
Fixes#12580
Additionally does not export no_connect netlist annotation on pins
which are both connected to another pin and a NC item, unless all
connected pins are stacked at the symbol level.
Adds testing of pin types to netlist QA unit tests.
Also fixes a bug so that voltages, currents and power dissipations are
only probed if the flag is set -- this keeps ngspice from throwing an
error if you probe something twice (for instance, if you have .probe
commands in text and turn off the auto-probing).
The pressure relief valve was not useful for common work patterns as it
forced the recalculation on many common actions such as bus expansion.
This caused it to actually feel slower than with the pressure relief
valve off.
For most schematics, realtime is now fast enough to not need the valve
and for those that are extremely complex, removing the valve helps this
run more predictably
We don't do anything with the parse tree, and we have to check it for
directives again afterwards to account for when our parsing failed, so
there's not much point in parsing it to begin with.