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CHello everybody Which of you can help me for this program! The progame is a book (circuit Modeling for Electromagnetic Compatibility) .. EMC Series Ian B. Darney.
thank you so much
Solved! Go to Solution.
I see. You don't want to learn. You don't want to waste your time; you want me to waste mine.
Make your Prime 3.1 sheet look like this:
The document describes a few mathcad programs. What's your problem exactly?
You might want to look here: Transient Emission Model
Success!
Luc
thank you
Which is the difference between the old version and premium 3.1.
Because some programs do not execute correctly.
greetings
A Word document that shows two images of the same Mathcad worksheet. What do you want us to do with it?
The document shows clearly a Mathcad 15 sheet. Fire it up and start editing! I doubt if anybody here will do it for you.
Thank you very much for your remark, but I want to understand by someone Experimented of mathcad for just saving time.
The problem that this program does not run on premium 3.1.and also I am a mathcad beginner.
This is the problem.
greetings
That program will work in Prime 3.1. If it doesn't, post your worksheet.
I can only suggest something else. If you like.
thank you for all
While I agree with Fred's comment, back in 2007, the task to me seemed more formidable. Thanks to the collab (T. Gutman) for the attached worksheet that I use, modified somewhat adding units, converted to Prime (which wasn't easy).
I hope this helps, but I'd definitely try transcribing the word info onto a MathCad worksheet.
thank you very much
I see. You don't want to learn. You don't want to waste your time; you want me to waste mine.
Make your Prime 3.1 sheet look like this:
thank you very much
You a great!
I want to learn but I am impatient, thank you for your advice and your patience.
greetings
I believe Fred's program uses a unit "V" but meant to use variable "Vlt":
You may want to update that.
Norm,
Good catch!!
I have a phobia against using variables that are also unit names (even though Prime is configured to make that easier,) that's why I renamed the voltage variable. I then promptly forgot that I had. The program only works because Prime decided that the "V" meant volts and assigned the value 1, which happened to be the correct value.
Sometimes several wrongs can make a right!
Fred