- MAG writer output name does not need to match a cell name
(this file is not written in this case, but the path and extension
are taken from it). A warning is issued in this case.
- Strings for layer and cell names are normalized (special chars, UTF8)
- Cell duplicates won't be produced but existing cells are reused.
This enables "incremental reads".
- force lower-case layer names to allow CIF/MAG loop (CIF needs
upper-case layer names, MAG doesn't)
- reverted CIF reader to standard
- new options for writer: tech, "zero timestamp".
- file name MUST be consistent with one cell name.
Reason: it's not possible to derive the initial
cell from the given options, so without the file name
being consistent, we can't know what to write there.
Basically the file name rather supplies the path.
The solution is to extend the api-version field.
"0.26.1" is KLayout API >= 0.26.1
"ruby" means: Ruby required
"python 2.6.0" means: Python required with at least 2.6.0
"0.26.1; ruby; python 2.6.0" means: all of this together
In addition, the version has been set to 0.26.1 now.
1.) The ExpressionContext class is a mapping of tl::Eval
and allows providing a variable context for the LQ.
Expression class is derived from ExpressionContext now.
2.) The variable lookup has been changed so that variables
can be modified even if they come from a parent context.
3.) LayoutQuery and iterator has been given an argument to
supply the context
1.) tl::Stream now can read from resources
(:<path> URL's)
2.) LVS/DRC templates are kept as resource,
"create_template" uses the URL to read them.
3.) Added samples for LVS
4.) Configured LVS to match sample
1. Errors in coerce_parameters are now shown as
red label + warning icon in the parameters dialog
2. Errors during produce are always logged now
Plus: the scroll bars of the PCell parameters page
don't jump back on "Apply".
- strmrun did not support x[rb] notation for file type
- x.y.py was rejected because y.py was taken as the suffix
- reason was extension() function for which there is
an extension_last() now
- but this function is no longer used as the lym::Macro
object is used now