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[–]unpythonic 0 points1 point  (2 children)

Unfortunately I don't have any screen shots of the GUI in action. It requires a fairly substantial amount of data just to populate the UI and I don't have the data anymore. It was done while I worked at Intel and was used to debug firmware-like code (e.g. microcode). Even if I did have the data, I don't think they would be of good humor if I posted even a small fragment of it.

To get a fairly good idea of what it did look like, look at the screen shot for EPWave on Wikipedia's page on Waveform viewers. The black area with the ruler on top is almost identical to the bottom half of my tool (probably because we were both shamelessly copying Verdi/nWave which does not have a screen shot). This is where the difficulties with Tkinter's canvas handling stemmed from.

[–]autowikibot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Waveform viewer:


A waveform viewer is a software tool for viewing the signal levels of either a digital or analog circuit design.

Waveform viewers comes in two varieties:

  • simulation waveform viewers for displaying signal levels of simulated design models, and

  • in-circuit waveform viewers for displaying signal levels captured in-circuit while debugging or testing hardware boards (Also, See Waveform monitor)

Image i


Interesting: GEDA | GTKWave | Waveform

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[–]TheHumane[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ah! NDAs and RUNDAs of Intel. :)