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Releases: NyanCAD/Mosaic

v1.1

02 Sep 12:14
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New Mosaic release!

Big addition is back-annotation, where you can tell the simulator interface to save for example an operating point to the database, and then add this data to a label in the schematic, which will then update in real-time. You can even save and annotate custom data from a notebook. Read more about it on the wiki https://github.com/NyanCAD/Mosaic/wiki/Annotations

A smaller change is that the default configuration does not sync to the cloud. This means no random "test foo" schematics show up when you first open the app, and you have to deliberately connect to a remote database to collaborate/share your design.

v1.0.2

11 Jul 14:43
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This is the second-ish release of the Mosaic desktop installer. I kind of skipped over 1.0.1 because uh well because I did. What's new? Oh all the usual fixes and improvements. I think the big change is that now the library manager has one "workspace" with an arbitrary hierarchy of categories inside. Much less confusing and more versatile.

v1.0

08 May 10:52
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This is it, I'm putting my foot down and calling it v1.0. That's not to say it is in any way complete or bug free, far from it. But it has reached a point where you can download the installer, and within minutes be designing and simulating electronic circuits.

What's that you say, it says 0.5.6 in the installer? Well yea it basically is, but I decided that since it installs and runs correctly I'm calling it 1.0 and the next release will be 1.0.1 or 1.1.0, I just don't feel like rebuilding all the software okay?

Holy moly why is it so big? Pff ask Conda. Mosaic is a few KB of compressed JS but the installation is a whole environment that bundles Python, Ngspice, CouchDB, Holoviz, Pyttoresque, and half a Linux userspace. If you feel strongly about this you can also install the python packages from pypi and install the native packages from source. Or use conda to install the packages into your existing environment.

The Mac release is completely untested. I hope it works. Blame Apple for not letting you run OS X on non-apple hardware.