Daxcad
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (November 2007) |
DAXCAD (CAD) DaxCAD is a 2D Computer Aided Drawing software application written in the early 1980s by Practical Technology Ltd.
Contents |
[edit] Introduction
DaxCAD was and still is a CAD Package used by a handful of companies throughout the world in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s. It origins stem from Paisley College of Technology, now known as Paisley University.
DaxCAD was written to be an inexpensive, simple to use CAD application for a range of industries. It was sold in many sectors from government to insurance
DaxCAD’s main design strength was its simplicity. At that time CAD applications were expensive and difficult to use. DAXCAD offered simplicity with complex drawing functions at fraction of the cost of similar systems.
[edit] History
The project DaxCAD was started by and was the brainchild of Kirk Ramsay, a senior lecturer at Paisley College. He had started a small software company, Practical Technology Ltd in Glasgow around 1984.
The company was founded at a time when CAD was starting to become more commonly available in the form of downsized workstations. The intent of the company was to ride the wave and make as the name suggests, technology practical.
After looking at the existing market offerings for CAD, namely DOGS and CV (ComputerVision), Kirk felt that there was a space for a product which was cheap and easy to use, as both of these packages were enormously expensive and rather hard and complex to learn. The cost of a single Computer Vision workstation could be £50,000 which made it inaccessible to all but very large companies.
The base platform chosen was Apollo. Apollo was a UNIX implementation similar to Sun. The language chosen for development was Fortran 77. Interestingly the Apollo workstation Operating System - AEGIS was written in Pascal.
With funding from the Clydesdale bank in place and a small team of local software engineers recruited from Paisley Tech - development of the code began. Apollo offered good quality graphics and within 12 months - DaxCAD Version 1 was ready to be released. A sales team was assembled and DaxCAD was launched.
After a year it was also obvious the PC was fast becoming a second and cheaper alternative to Apollo. Practical Technology found themselves having to plan to downsize an already downsized product. The plan for PC DaxCAD was hatched. It was an ambitious plan by any standard. To take Fortran 77 code and port it on a PC. Thanks to Microsoft, early PC systems had substantially limiting memory and graphics capabilities. DaxCAD had been designed to run on Unix with superior memory capabilities. After a year of hard work - DaxCAD PC was launched. It proved to be a success but the software was large and unwieldy. A complex arrangement of overlays using Pharlap meant that the software was slow and unstable. It also meant having to keep two distinct versions of the software as Intel and Motorola processors were designed differently.
The code became littered with a crude form of pre-processors – It marked out the code using the fortran comment command "C" So if you wanted the code to be available for a PC ( IBM ) then you would surround the code with CIBM. For Apollo - CAPOLLO. Later versions included Sun and there were specified processors for that as well.
And of course the dreaded device drivers had to be written to support mice, monitors, graphics cards. During this period – RACAL – who had an electronic cad system licensed the use of DAXCAD to be part of their system. DaxCAD would be used to design the circuit boards and other mechanical components – Racal Redboard
[edit] DaxCAD industry sectors
- Architectural engineering
- Civil Engineering
- Construction
- Factory Layout
- Heating, Ventilation and air-conditioning (HVAC)
- Mechanical (MCAD) Engineering[
- Automotive - vehicles
- Aerospace
- Ship Building
- Electronic design automation (EDA)
- Electronic and Electrical (ECAD)
- Digital circuit design
- Electrical Engineering
- Manufacturing process planning
- Industrial Design
- Government
- Banking, Insurance & Finance
[edit] Software today
The DAXCAD software today is a registered sourceforge project and can be loacted at http://sourceforge.net/projects/daxcad. The code is based on a mixtrue of Fortran 77 and ANSI C. C++ was never used. DAXCAD also has a built in BASIC interpreter and during it life, many macros were written to automate various drawing office tasks.
[edit] DAXCAD capabilities
The capabilities of DaxCAD include:
- 2D Drawing
- Paper based modeling
- Exporting of drawing to DXF Format
- Export File formats to Misomex, PEPS, GNC, IGES and Interleaf
- Plotting in Postscript, HPGL and Calcomp formats
- Importing DXF, ComputerVision, GENIO, PathTrace , GERBER
- Automatic boundary calculation for hatching and NC Output
- Vector based calculation engine
- BASIC Style macro interpreter for automation
- References for components and symbols
- ISO Dimension
- Property tagging - Bill of Materials reporting
- 8 Bit Color mapping
[edit] Software technologies
DaxCAD is written in the following languages
- Fortran 77
- ANSI C
DAXCAD has its own Macro interpreter which is a form of BASIC.
To compile and run DAXCAD Cygwin is the recommended platform. DAXCAD uses X Window as its graphics engine. The software will compile using the GCC ( G77) compiler and the GCC compiler.
[edit] Hardware and OS technologies
DaxCAD ran on PC based and Unix based systems
1984 - 1994
- Apollo AEGIS
- Sun SunOS
- Sun Solaris (Advent)
- HP HP-UX
- Sony
- Intel PC DOS Based 286
- Intel PC DOS Based 386
2001 - present
- Windows 2000, 2003, XP, VISTA
- Linux Various
- Solaris 10 Intel (Protoype)
[edit] Using DAXCAD
[edit] See also
[edit] Other related topics
- Computer graphics
- Computer representation of surfaces
- List of CAD companies
- CAD standards
- New product development
- Category:Computer-aided design software
- Category:Computer-aided manufacturing software
- Category:Computer-aided engineering software
- Category:Free computer-aided design software
- Category:CAD file formats
[edit] References
[edit] External links
|