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Subject: Skill 101?
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shawn0900
Posts: 3
Online: User is Offline
7/16/2008 6:19 PM  
I'm brand new to SKILL and I'm having trouble finding a starting point to learn it.   I'm no stranger to programming in general, but apparently you need to be a detective to find a good tutorial on SKILL.  Are there any?  Any ideas where I should start?  Sourcelink does not seem to produce a decent tutorial.

Shawn Brown
Randy R.
Posts: 52
Online: User is Offline
7/16/2008 7:49 PM  
For using SKILL in Allegro PCB Layout, try this post:
http://www.cdnusers.org/Forums/tabid/52/view/topic/forumid/77/postid/3757/Default.aspx

G'Day,
dschaefer
Posts: 42
Online: User is Offline
7/16/2008 9:44 PM  
Best resources I've run across are located here:

http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/skill_school/?v=1&t=search&ch=web&pub=groups&sec=group&slk=3

It's a Yahoo goup "skill_school" and does have a set of progressively more involved tutorials.

Hth,
Dave
shawn0900
Posts: 3
Online: User is Offline
7/17/2008 6:50 AM  
Thanks, I just joined the group.

Shawn Brown
dschaefer
Posts: 42
Online: User is Offline
7/17/2008 7:25 AM  
Didn't have my login info for the last post, lessons are here:

http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/skill_school/files/Examples/Lessons/

Dave
quann@qualcomm.com
Posts: 2
Online: User is Offline
7/17/2008 12:18 PM  

If you are new to SKILL, I suggest that you run SKILL in interactive mode without the framework database first. Of course, attend Cadence SKILL training class. But for best learning, you should play around with SKILL first before registering the class. If you know LISP or Scheme, you are in good shape. Below is an except from my book of how to run interactively at Unix window (i.e. you do not need to login icfb )

http://www.geocities.com/theperlconnection/CadScriptingLanguages_skill.pdf

For more info on the book "CAD Scriping Languaged: Ruby, Python, Perl, Tcl & SKILL":
http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&id=v8l72QBDzD0C&dq=cad+scripting+languages+quan+nguyen&printsec=frontcover&source=web&ots=uZK-wNj8fU&sig=egRkej0Rb0MhIvh_ONBqZc50KUA&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result#PPA23,M1




Attachment: CadScriptingLanguages_skill.pdf

quann@qualcomm.com
Posts: 2
Online: User is Offline
7/17/2008 12:27 PM  
Posted By quan on 7/17/2008 12:18 PM

If you are new to SKILL, I suggest that you run SKILL in interactive mode without the framework database first. Of course, attend Cadence SKILL training class. But for best learning, you should play around with SKILL first before registering the class. If you know LISP or Scheme, you are in good shape. Below is an except from my book of how to run interactively at Unix window (i.e. you do not need to login icfb )

http://www.geocities.com/theperlconnection/CadScriptingLanguages_skill.pdf

For more info on the book "CAD Scriping Languaged: Ruby, Python, Perl, Tcl & SKILL":
http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&id=v8l72QBDzD0C&dq=cad+scripting+languages+quan+nguyen&printsec=frontcover&source=web&ots=uZK-wNj8fU&sig=egRkej0Rb0MhIvh_ONBqZc50KUA&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result#PPA23,M1





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