![]() ![]() Similarly, circuit performance optimisation is possible using the A SPICE Circuit Optimizer (ASCO) package or Python code linked to Qucs.īetween 2003, and January 2015, the sourceforge Qucs download statistics show that over one million downloads of the software have been recorded. Qucs also allows users to process post-simulation data with the popular Octave numerical data analysis package. Qucs includes built-in code for processing and visualising simulation output data. In the period since Qucs was first released it has evolved into an advanced circuit simulation and device modelling tool with a user friendly “graphical user interface” (GUI) for circuit schematic capture, for investigating circuit and device properties from DC to RF and beyond, and for launching other circuit simulation software, including the FreeHDL (VHDL) and Icarus Verilog digital simulators. Versions are available for Linux (Ubuntu and other distributions), Mac OS X © and the Windows © 32 bit operating system. Qucs numbered releases and day-to-day development code snapshots can be downloaded from ( ). ![]() Both binary and source code releases take place at regular intervals. Since its initial public release in 2003 around twenty contributors, from all regions of the world, have invested their expertise and time to support the development of the software. Qucs is the brain-child of German Engineers Michael Margraf and Stefan Jahn. The ‘Quite universal circuit simulator’ Qucs (pronounced: kju:ks) is an open source circuit simulator developed by a group of engineers, scientists and mathematicians under the GNU General Public License (GPL).
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