Including Design Details on a PCB in Altium Designer

Many of the outputs that you generate will require additional details. For example, the manufacturing drawing will need dimensions, the assembly drawing might need an enlarged view of a specific area of the board, and the fabrication drawing will need a Layer Stack Table and a Drill Table. These types of detail can be added in the PCB editor or in the PCB Footprint editor.

Note that while a PCB design can be documented right in the PCB editor, the software also includes an advanced, yet flexible graphical editing environment for creating board design production documents, called Draftsman. Complete with a dedicated set of drawing tools, the Draftsman drawing system provides an interactive approach to bringing together fabrication and assembly drawings with custom templates, annotations, dimensions, callouts, and notes.

Learn more about Draftsman

General Purpose Drawing Layers

In the PCB editor, detail such as dimensions, and fabrication and assembly instructions are added on mechanical layers. The software supports an unlimited amount of general purpose mechanical layers, which are enabled in the View Configuration panel. These layers can be named as required (right-click on the name then select Edit Layer), and included in printouts and layer-based fabrication outputs.

To learn more about mechanical layers, see Working with Mechanical Layers.

Layer Stack Table

A Layer Stack Table can be placed on a PCB document alongside the design itself. It provides a detailed summary of the board layer stackups and how the layer groups are assigned.
A Layer Stack Table can be placed on a PCB document alongside the design itself. It provides a detailed summary of the board layer stackups and how the layer groups are assigned.

A Layer Stack Table is a tabular graphic object that documents the layers, materials, thicknesses, and dielectric constants implemented in the current PCB design. It is placed and positioned alongside the board design in the design space and also includes a graphical key and option map that shows the layer stack used in each region of the board. A Layer Stack Table reflects the layer configurations defined through the Layer Stack Manager and is an important documentation asset for designs with a complex layer stack structure, such as a rigid-flex design.

The Layer Stack Table is available in the PCB editor when the design space view is set to normal 2D mode (shortcut 2). After launching the Layer Stack Table placement command (Place » Layer Stack Table), the cursor will change to a cross-hair and you will enter Layer Stack Table placement mode. Placement is made by performing the following sequence of actions:

  1. Click to place the table.
  2. The editor remains in Layer Stack Table placement mode, ready to place another table if required. If not, right-click or press Esc to exit placement mode.
Note the Board Map that appears below the table. This is an outline of the board showing how the various layer stacks are assigned to regions of the board. The Board Map can be disabled or scaled by using the Show Board Map option in the Layer Stack Table mode of the Properties panel.

Additional actions that can be performed during placement while the layer stack table is still floating on the cursor and before the center point of the layer stack table is anchored are:

  • Press the Alt key to constrain the direction of movement to the horizontal or vertical axis, depending on the initial direction of movement. 
  • Press the Spacebar to rotate the layer stack table counterclockwise or Shift+Spacebar for clockwise rotation. Rotation is in increments of 90°.

To move a Layer Stack Table, click, hold and drag the table to the desired location.

Select and drag to reposition a Layer Stack Table.
Select and drag to reposition a Layer Stack Table.

Drill Table

The Drill Table presents a live summary of all drill holes present in the board
The Drill Table presents a live summary of all drill holes present in the board

A drill table (also known as a drill drawing table or a drill drawing legend) is a standard element required for the manufacture of a Printed Circuit Board. The drill table lists the size and number of holes for each drill used on the board. Each drill size can be represented by a symbol, a letter, or the actual hole size. When a drill drawing is generated for the board, each actual drill site is marked by a symbol. The drill table updates in real time, i.e. as hole-containing objects such as pads and vias are placed or removed from the PCB design, the table updates.

A Drill Symbol is displayed at each drill site on the Drill Drawing layer when the Show Drill Symbols option is enabled in the Drill Symbols dialog.

A Drill Table can be placed only in the PCB Editor. After launching the command, a drill table will appear attached to the cursor. Position the table in a suitable location outside the board then click or press Enter to place it.

Note that the drill table must be placed on the Drill Drawing layer. It will be automatically placed on the Drill Drawing layer even if this is not the currently active layer.

Additional actions that can be performed during placement while the drill table is still floating on the cursor and before the drill table is anchored are:

  • Press the Tab key to pause the placement and access the Drill Table mode of the Properties panel, from where its properties can be changed on the fly. Click the pause button overlay ( ) to resume placement.
  • Press the Alt key to constrain the direction of movement to the horizontal or vertical axis depending on the initial direction of movement. 

Moving a Drill Table

Click and hold anywhere within the drill table then move it to the desired location in the PCB editor design space.

Interactively Resizing a Drill Table

The drill table is automatically sized based on the specified Text Height setting, as well as the number of different hole sizes (rows) and the number of defined columns. To interactively resize the table, click once to select it then click and hold on a corner vertex then move to resize as required. Note that interactively resizing the table will also increase/decrease the font size.

Interactively Switching the Layer Pair to Preview

When the board includes layer-pairs, the displayed layer-pair is controlled by the Layers Pairs option in the Drill Table mode of the Properties panel.

This chosen layer-pair also can be switched using the:

  • PCB Editor right-click menu - right-click on the Drill Table then select the required layer-pair in the Drill Table sub-menu as shown in the image below.

    Right-click on the Drill Table to switch it to display another layer-pair
    Right-click on the Drill Table to switch it to display another layer-pair

    Selecting the Show All entry on the sub-menu is equivalent to setting the Layer Pairs field (when viewing the drill table's properties in the Properties panel) to All Layer Pairs (Composite table). If you want all information in separate tables, this can be achieved through the Properties panel only by setting the Layer Pairs field to All Layer Pairs (Separate tables).
  • Layer-pair selection menu accessed via the Layer Tab at the bottom of the design space as shown in the image below.

Design View

Place a Design View to show a specific area of the board. This example has been scaled to 200%.
Place a Design View to show a specific area of the board. This example has been scaled to 200%.

The PCB Design View object is a graphic snapshot of any rectangular-shaped region of the current board or another board. It can be placed anywhere in the design space and scaled to any size.

A Design View can be placed only in the PCB Editor. After launching the Design View placement command (Place » Design View), a design view will appear attached to the cursor. Position the design view in a suitable location then click or press Enter to place it.

Additional actions that can be performed during placement while the design view is still floating on the cursor and before the design view is anchored are:

  • Press the Alt key to constrain the direction of movement to the horizontal or vertical axis, depending on the initial direction of movement.

After placement of the design view, you can define the display of desired layers by performing the following steps:

  1. With the Design View selected in the design space, open the Properties panel by double-clicking or right-clicking then choosing Properties from the context menu.
  2. Use the Define button in the Properties panel to interactively define the area of interest.
  3. In the Layers section of the Properties panel, click (toggle) the  icon to enable the display of the desired layers. When enabled in the Properties panel, the desired layer(s) will display the  icon.

Design Views are included in printed and PDF output. The Design View retains its own layer visibility settings in the output allowing it to present as required in the printed/PDF output. Note that the primitives on layers used in the Design View continue to obey the display settings defined for that layer in the Print dialog. For example, if the Top Overlay is displayed in the Design View and the Top Overlay is configured to display tracks in Draft mode for that output in the Output Job, then the Top Overlay tracks in the Design View will also present in Draft mode.

Note that Design Views are not included in Gerber or ODB++ output.

Once a Design View has been placed in the design space, you can interactively adjust the position, scale, size and focus of the View.

  • Change the positionClick+Drag the Design View object to a new location on the PCB design space.
  • Adjusting the Scale – click once to select the Design View then Click+Drag on a corner handle to scale the Design View up (drag out) or down (drag in).
  • Adjusting the View Size – click once to select the Design View then Ctrl+Click+Drag on a corner handle to resize the Design View.
  • Changing the Focus – Ctrl+Click+Drag anywhere within the Design View to slide the currently viewed area around within the Design View window.

Ctrl+Click+Drag to slide and adjust the area currently being viewed in the Design View.
Ctrl+Click+Drag to slide and adjust the area currently being viewed in the Design View.

OLE Object

A placed sequence of OLE objects – an image, spreadsheet cells and word document text (top to bottom)
A placed sequence of OLE objects – an image, spreadsheet cells and word document text (top to bottom)

Object Linking and Embedding (OLE) technology in the PCB editor allows data supplied by Windows OLE applications to be embedded in a PCB design while actively linking back to the source application. In many cases, this allows the embedded PCB data to be edited from within the application that created it.

Typical OLE objects that might be placed in a PCB document include common Excel documents, Word documents, or graphics objects from a suitable OLE image application. The supported file types include universal formats such as CSV and XLS format spreadsheets, DOC and RTF word documents, and BMP image files.

OLE objects are available for placement/embedding in the PCB Editor. After launching the Place » Object From File command, choose the desired file from the Choose File dialog then click to place the object in the design space. 

Altium’s Smart Paste capability also allows a selection in an OLE application to be copied and pasted (Edit » Paste) into the PCB document as an OLE object. The text paste option (Edit » Paste Text) can be used to strip the text elements from an OLE object if required. These will be placed as PCB text objects.

Once placed, embedded objects can be proportionally scaled by clicking, holding and dragging their selection handles. With text-based objects such as Word and Excel documents, the embedded text is automatically scaled in size and thickness to suit the new dimensions.

  • An OLE Object also can be converted to a collection of free primitive objects using the Tools » Convert » Explode OLE Object to Free Primitives command. This will break the object into appropriate Regions and/or Text objects.
  • A convert to free primitives option is also offered if the matching OLE application cannot be found when attempting to edit an OLE Object.

Dimensions

The PCB and PCB Footprint editors include a range of dimensioning tools to cater to different design requirements.

Dimension Object Description
Angular Dimension Allows for the dimensioning of angular distances.
Baseline Dimension Allows for the dimensioning of a linear distance of a collection of references, relative to a single base reference. The first point chosen is the 'base'. All subsequent points are relative to this first point. The dimension value in each case is therefore the distance between each reference point and the 'base', measured in the default units. The references may be tracks, arcs, pads, vias, text, fills, polygons, or components.
Center Dimension Allows for the center of an arc or circle to be marked.
Leader Dimension Allows for the labeling of an object, point or area. There are three types of leader available: Automatic, Round and Square, which reflect the label text either being encapsulated in a circle or square or not at all. The pointer can be an arrow or a dot.
Linear Dimension Allows for the dimensioning of a linear distance. The dimension value is the distance between the start and end markers (reference points selected by the user) measured in the default units. The references may be objects (tracks, arcs, pads, vias, text, fills, polygons, or components) or points in free space.
Linear Diameter Dimension Allows for the dimensioning of an arc or circle with respect to the diameter, rather than the radius. The dimension can be placed either internally or externally.
Ordinate Dimension Allows for the dimensioning of a linear distance of a collection of objects relative to a single reference object. The first object chosen is the 'base'. All subsequent objects are relative to this first object. The dimension value in each case is, therefore, the distance between each reference object and the 'base' measured in the default units. The references may be tracks, arcs, pads, vias, text, fills, polygons, or components.
Radial Dimension Allows for the dimensioning of a radius with respect to an arc or circle. The dimension can be placed either internally or externally.
Radial Diameter Dimension Allows for the dimensioning of an arc or circle with respect to the diameter, rather than the radius. The dimension can be placed either internally or externally, in relation to the circumference of the arc/circle.
Standard Dimension

Places dimensioning information on the current PCB layer. The dimension value is the distance between the start and end markers measured in the default units.

The Standard Dimension is considered a legacy dimensioning tool, superseded with the enhanced functionality provided by the linear and other dimension objects.

Dimension objects are available in the Place » Dimension sub-menu of the main menus. When dimensioning an object, anchor points become available to you that highlight where the dimension can be attached. The Status bar displays information about the actions needed for each step throughout the process. The point nearest the cursor will be the one used and where the dimension will attach if you proceed to click or press Enter.

Use the editor's unified cursor-snap system for precise placement. Refer to the Working with the Cursor-Snap System page to learn more.

Examples of placing some dimensions are shown in the video below.

Additional actions that can be performed during placement are:

  • Press the + and - keys (on the numeric keypad) to cycle forward and backward through all visible layers in the design respectively – to change placement layer quickly.
  • When placing a Baseline, Center, Linear Diameter, Linear or Ordinate Dimension, press Spacebar to rotate the dimension counterclockwise or Shift+Spacebar for clockwise rotation. Rotation is in accordance with the value for the Rotation Step defined on the PCB Editor – General page of the Preferences dialog.
  • When placing a Standard Dimension, press the L key to flip the dimension to the other side of the board – note that this is only possible prior to anchoring the dimension's start point.

A dimension's value (where applicable) automatically updates as its start or end points are moved. Likewise, if the position of an object that a reference point of the dimension is anchored to is changed, the dimension will update and expand/contract to reflect this. For a radius/diameter-based dimension, the value automatically updates as the diameter of the reference arc or circle changes.

When the reference or references to which a dimension object is attached are deleted, a dialog will open asking whether the dimension should also be deleted. If the dimension is not deleted, it remains in the design space, but non-referenced.

A dimension object can be moved in the following ways:

  • Selecting both the dimension object and the dimensioned object(s). The whole can be dragged to a new location as required.
  • Selecting a dimensioned object only. The dimension text will follow the object in its alignment plane only. The dimension extensions (or, for a Radial Diameter or Radial Dimension, its pointer and tail) will expand/contract to keep the relationship between dimension and object being dimensioned. For a Center or Leader Dimension, it will move with the object. The segment of the Leader Dimension (between the arrow/dot and the first defined elbow) will expand/contract to keep the relationship between the dimension and the object being dimensioned.
  • Selecting the dimension object only. It is important to note that the dimension cannot be moved on its own if it is referenced by a design object. To move the dimension only, it must first be detached from the object(s) it is dimensioning.

When a dimension object is selected, editing handles are available with which you can edit the placed dimension object directly in the design space by changing properties such as the position of its text and its reference points graphically. Examples of editing handles for some dimensions are shown below.

Javascript ID: PCB_Dimensions_Handles

When a linear dimension object is selected, the following editing handles are available:

  • Click & drag A or B to adjust the dimension text position and extension line length.
  • Click & drag C or D to move the start or end reference points of the dimension.

When an angular dimension object is selected, the following editing handles are available:

  • Click & drag A or B to change the position of the dimension text and extension line length.
  • Click & drag C or E to detach the dimension from the first reference object.
  • Click & drag D or F to detach the dimension from the second reference object.

When a radial dimension object is selected, the following editing handles are available:

  • Click & drag A to adjust the dimension text position relative to the 'tail' of the arrow pointer.
  • Click & drag B to adjust the position of the arrow pointer around the circumference of the circle or arc.
  • Click & drag C to move the start point of the dimension.
If the dimension text is placed within the circumference of the arc or circle, only two of the three editing handles will be available for use – A and C. Editing handle A will assume the additional role of editing handle B.

When an ordinate dimension object is selected, the following editing handles are available.

  • Click & drag handle A to move the dimension text.
  • Click & drag the handles at B to move that reference individually with respect to the base.

Handles on (or nearest to) the object(s) being dimensioned (for example, C and D for a Linear Dimension or C & E and D & F for an Angular Dimension, as shown above) allow for redefinable references – once the dimension is detached from a reference object, it becomes non-referenced and can be moved for attachment to a different reference point or object. As you drag any of the editing handles of a non-referenced Linear, Ordinate or Baseline Dimension, it may be rotated.

Properties of Dimension Objects

Dimensions have a range of configuration options, offering a high-level of customization of the arrows and text. Open the Properties panel for one or more selected dimension objects to edit their properties. 

Property Applies To Objects Description

Style

Width All, except for Center and Ordinate Dimensions The current dimension line width.
Width (in the Extension Line region)

Angular Dimension

Baseline Dimension

Linear Dimension

Linear Diameter Dimension

Ordinate Dimension

The current width for the dimension extension lines.
Gap

Angular Dimension

Baseline Dimension

Leader Dimension

Linear Dimension

Linear Diameter Dimension

Ordinate Dimension

  • For a Leader Dimension, this is the current gap value, which is the distance between the leader dimension arrow/dot and the object/point with which the leader is associated.
  • For other dimensions, this is the distance between a dimension extension line and the object being dimensioned.
Offset

Angular Dimension

Baseline Dimension

Linear Dimension

Linear Diameter Dimension

The current arrow line offset with respect to the dimension extension line.
Text Gap All, except for Center and Standard Dimensions
  • For a Leader Dimension, this is the current gap between the dimension text and the last 'leg' of the leader line.

    When the Leader Shape for a Leader Dimension is set to Round or Square, this becomes the gap between the dimension text and the right-hand edge of the encapsulating shape. In this case, increasing the gap will actually bring the text closer to the end of the leader line.
  • For other dimensions, this is the current gap to the left and right of the dimension value text. 
Leader Shape Leader Dimension Use the drop-down to determine which shape is used to encapsulate the dimension text. Available options are AutomaticRound, and Square. If Round or Square are selected, enter the desired Size.
Arrow Style Leader Dimension Use the drop-down to select the desired leader style. Choices are Arrow or Dot. Enter the desired Size.
Height Standard Dimension The current extension line height.
Arrow Size

Angular Dimension

Baseline Dimension

Linear Dimension

Linear Diameter Dimension

Radial Dimension

Radial Diameter Dimension

The current arrowhead size. The size is measured as the distance between the arrow tip and the end of the arrow 'legs'.
Arrow Length

Angular Dimension

Baseline Dimension

Linear Dimension

Linear Diameter Dimension

Radial Dimension

Radial Diameter Dimension

The current arrow length. Note that the value entered into this field is applied only when the Arrow Position (in the Properties region) is set to Outside.

Properties

Text Leader Dimension Enter the desired text.
Layer All The layer to which the dimension is currently assigned. Use the drop-down to select the desired layer. Dimensions can be assigned to any available layer.
Text Position All, except for Center and Standard Dimensions

The current position of the dimension text. Use the associated drop-down list to choose one of the following options (the set of available options depends on the dimension object type):

  • Automatic – the dimension text will be placed in the most appropriate location with respect to the dimension so that the text itself is always readable.
  • Aligned - Center – the dimension text will be aligned to the center of the dimension line.
  • Aligned - Top – the dimension text will be aligned above the dimension line and centered.
  • Aligned - Bottom – the dimension text will be aligned below the dimension line and centered.
  • Aligned - Right – the dimension text will be aligned to the right of the dimension line (outside of the extension line).
  • Aligned - Left
    • For an Angular, Baseline, Linear, Linear Diameter, or Radial Diameter Dimension, the dimension text will be aligned to the left of the dimension line (outside of the extension line).
    • For a Leader Dimension, the dimension text will be aligned with the angle of the last 'leg' of the leader line.
    • For an Ordinate or Radial Dimension, the dimension text will be aligned with the angle of the dimension line.
  • Aligned - Inside Right – the dimension text will be aligned to the right of the dimension line (inside the extension line).
  • Aligned - Inside Left – the dimension text will be aligned to the left of the dimension line (inside the extension line).
  • Unidirectional:
    • For an Angular, Baseline, Linear, Linear Diameter, or Radial Diameter Dimension, the dimension text will be aligned to the center of the dimension line but will remain horizontal regardless of the dimension alignment angle.
    • For a Leader Dimension, Ordinate, or Radial Dimension, the dimension text will remain horizontal regardless of the dimension alignment angle.
  • Manual – the dimension text will be available for manual placement directly in the design space.
Arrow Position

Angular Dimension

Baseline Dimension

Linear Dimension

Linear Diameter Dimension

Radial Dimension

Radial Diameter Dimension

The current position of the dimension arrows. The available options are:

  • Inside – arrows will be positioned inside the dimension's extension lines (pointing outwards).
  • Outside – arrows will be positioned outside the dimension's extension lines (pointing inwards).
Angular Step Radial Diameter Dimension The current angular step setting for the dimension. This is the rotation step used when placing the arrow portion of the dimension. Moving the arrow around the circle or arc during placement of the dimension, the number and position of possible places to anchor the dimension are determined by this angular step value.
Text Height All, except for Center Dimension The current height of the dimension text characters. The character width used to display or print the text is automatically proportioned to this height. A minimum height of 36mil (0.9mm) will allow the text to be legibly photo-plotted.
Rotation

Center Dimension

Linear Dimension

Linear Diameter Dimension

Ordinate Dimension

The angle of alignment of the dimension, measured counterclockwise in degrees from the horizontal.
Size Center Dimension The current length of the dimension's crosshair lines (or the diameter of the encompassing circle).
Font Type All, except for Center Dimension
  • TrueType – use the drop-down field to choose the required TrueType font. The drop-down list is populated with TrueType and OpenType (a superset of TrueType) fonts found in the \Windows\Fonts folder. Note that the list will only include entries for detected (and uniquely named) root fonts. Use the B (bold) and I (Italic) options to add emphasis to the text.

    Learn more about True Type Font Support.
    The use of TrueType fonts in PCB documents will result in more complex Gerber outputs.
  • Stroke – stroke-based fonts are built into the software and cannot be changed. All three fonts have the full IBM extended ASCII character set that supports English and other European languages.
    • Font – use the drop-down to choose the required Stroke font. Available options are DefaultSerif, and Sans Serif. The Default style is a simple vector font that supports pen plotting and vector photo-plotting. The Sans Serif and Serif fonts are more complex and will slow down vector output generation, such as Gerber.
    • Stroke Width – the current stroke width.

Units

Primary Units

Angular Dimension

Baseline Dimension

Linear Dimension

Linear Diameter Dimension

Ordinate Dimension

Radial Dimension

Radial Diameter Dimension

The current unit that is selected for the calculation and display of the dimension value.

  • For an Angular Dimension, choose either Degrees (display the dimension value in Degrees/Minutes/Seconds) or Radians.
  • For other applicable dimensions, choose either MilsMillimetersInchesCentimeters, or Automatic.
    The Automatic setting follows the actual measurement unit employed for the board as determined by the Units setting in the Other region of the Properties panel for the board (when no object is selected in the design space).
Value Precision

Angular Dimension

Baseline Dimension

Linear Dimension

Linear Diameter Dimension

Ordinate Dimension

Radial Dimension

Radial Diameter Dimension

The current setting for the number of decimal places to the right of the decimal point for which the dimension will be displayed.

Value

Format

All, except for Center and Leader Dimensions

The current setting for the format of the dimension text. Use the associated drop-down to change the format as required. The options listed will depend on the chosen Unit and present based on the actual value for the current dimension. In generic terms, the available options are (the set of available options depends on the dimension object type):

  • None – no dimension text is displayed.
  • Value Only – no units are displayed, only the dimension value (e.g., 600.00, ø 600.00 or 45).
  • Value and Unit – units are displayed after the dimension value (e.g., 600.00mil or ø 600.00mil).
  • Value and Bracketed Unit – units are displayed in brackets after the dimension value (e.g., 600.00 (mil) or ø 600.00 (mil)).
  • Degrees Only – units of degrees are displayed after the dimension value (e.g., 45°).
  • Degrees/Minutes – units of degrees and minutes are displayed after the dimension value (e.g., 45°12').
  • Degrees/Minutes/Seconds – units of degrees/minutes/seconds are displayed after the dimension value (e.g., 45°12'0.61").
  • When a Linear Diameter or Radial Diameter Dimension is selected, the fixed prefix of ø is also displayed for all formats other than None.
  • When the chosen unit is Radians for the selected Angular Dimension, the available options are None and Value Only.
Prefix

Angular Dimension

Baseline Dimension

Linear Dimension

Linear Diameter Dimension

Ordinate Dimension

Radial Dimension

Radial Diameter Dimension

The prefix to the dimension value. For a Linear Diameter or Radial Diameter Dimension, this field is fixed with the character ø.
Suffix

Angular Dimension

Baseline Dimension

Linear Dimension

Linear Diameter Dimension

Ordinate Dimension

Radial Dimension

Radial Diameter Dimension

The suffix to the dimension value.
Sample

All, except for Center and Leader Dimensions

This field presents a sample of how the dimension text will appear in accordance with the specified Format and any defined Prefix and/or Suffix.
Start point (X/Y) Standard Dimension

 The start point of the dimension for X (first value) and Y (second value).

End point (X/Y) Standard Dimension The end point of the dimension for X (first value) and Y (second value).

Converting Dimensions to Primitives

Dimensions are group design objects, i.e. they are comprised of one or more string and track segments. A dimension can be converted to its constituent primitive objects using the Tools » Convert » Explode Dimension to Free Primitives command.

  • Although there is no actual command to regroup an exploded dimension, you can use the Undo command to achieve this.
  • The Tools » Convert sub-menu of the main menus also includes the Explode Coordinate to Free Primitives command. While Coordinate objects cannot be placed in current versions of Altium Designer, you can use this command to convert a Coordinate object placed in a design created in a previous version to its original set of primitives.
If you find an issue, select the text/image and pressCtrl + Enterto send us your feedback.
Note

The features available depend on your Altium product access level. Compare features included in the various levels of Altium Designer Software Subscription and functionality delivered through applications provided by the Altium 365 platform.

If you don’t see a discussed feature in your software, contact Altium Sales to find out more.

Content