Getting Started with the Cadence Software. Information about TDM, refer to the Team Design Manager User Guide. Getting Started with the Cadence Software your_install_dir is where the Cadence software is installed. You might want to make a note of its location for future reference. Previously the installation package was based on CDROMs and we normally point to CDROM1 in the InstallScape to start installation. But for the one I downloaded have not found any CDROM folder. The Cadence Design Communities support Cadence users and technologists interacting to exchange ideas, news, technical information, and best practices.
I recently found out about the i3 window manager it is a tiling window manager (workspaces come into the picture too) I was wondering it anyone has any experience using it with Cadence Virtuoso? Is it difficult to manage it? Does it need any SKILL support within Cadence. What do you generally think about using something like that with Cadence Virtuoso? I personally haven't tried it, but I would like to check it out since I am a bit annoyed with having to manually resize and/or move many windows around when I'm doing my projects. Think about it.ADE, ViVA, Schematic, Layout, Library Manager, CIW.and you always open more. I use it and can highly recommend it.
It has several modes. Primarily the window tile. So naturally they are equally sized and arrange themselves so they don't overlap and they cover the screen. This is not a good mode for the use with the Cadence software, because some windows want to be big and some want to be small (the CIW wants to be small and the schematics or waveform windows want to be large). Tony wong comics wallpapers.
A second mode is floating, meaning you can take individual windows out of tiling mode and have them float over the tiled windows. This is also not a good model for the Cadence software. It takes you back to the clutter problem you currently have. The third mode is stacking mode. In this case the windows are all full sized, but they stack on top of each other. Generally I dedicate one desktop to the Cadence software, and with this stacking mode each window takes the full screen. Then I use Alt-J to go to the next window down on the stack or Alt-K to go to the next window up.
It makes it very fast to switch between the windows (mouse is not required), and the title bars of each of the windows is always visible so you can always find what you want. I teach a lot of classes where the students are using ADE, and they are constantly hunting for obscured windows. It is a huge waste of time. I never have that problem when I am using i3. I just tried i3 on my laptop and love it (still a noob though). I don't have any Cadence software on my laptop so I can't check directly. What I realised is that if a floating window opens you can push it back into a tile and resize it.
It's certainly faster than grabbing my mouse. I see your point with the stacking and I can see why it might be the best for me too.
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- I just thought of the many Cadence windows that open with obscure sizing and hide away buttons.if you stack them in full page you see everything in just two keystrokes. Although I saw more comparison with vi, for me the i3 actually sits close to Emacs. I also noticed my battery made a huge jump (up) when I left Unity.