Designator

Now reading version 19.1. For the latest, read: Designator for version 21
 

Parent page: Schematic Objects

The Designator uniquely identifies each component in the design.The Designator uniquely identifies each component in the design.

Summary

The designator field is a child parameter object of a schematic component (part). It is used to uniquely identify each placed part to distinguish it from all other parts placed in all the schematic sheets in the project.

Availability and Placement

The designator is automatically placed when the parent component part object is placed. It is not a design object that you can directly place.

Graphical Editing

The designator string can be edited graphically using what is known as in-place editing. To edit a designator string in-place, click once to select, pause for a second, then click a second time to enter edit mode.

 Click once to select the string.

 Pause, then click a second time to enter in-place edit mode.

 In this image, the string has been selected, ready to type in a replacement string.

The value of the designator string can be edited in-place.

Once editing is complete, press Enter or click away from the string to exit in-place editing mode.

If attempting to graphically modify an object that has its Locked property enabled, a dialog will appear asking for confirmation to proceed with the edit. If the Protect Locked Objects option is enabled on the Schematic – Graphical Editing page of the Preferences dialog, and the Locked option for that design object is enabled as well, then that object cannot be selected or graphically edited. Click the locked object to select it then disable the Locked property in the List panel or disable the Protect Locked Objects option to graphically edit the object.

Non-Graphical Editing

There are two aspects to consider in relation to editing the designator: editing the value of the designator and editing the display properties of the designator. 

Rather than manually editing each component designator, it is more practical to leave the assignment of the designators until the schematic is complete. After that, all designators can be logically assigned for the entire project using one of the Schematic Editor Annotate commands (Tools » Annotation) which offer full control for sheet-by-sheet positional annotation. For more information about annotation, see Annotating the Components.

The designator (and comment) strings can be displayed in the schematic library editor then doubled-clicked on to edit their properties. The  icon associated with the field in the Properties panel is used to show or hide the designator.

Editing the Designator Value in the Schematic Editor

The designator can be defined in the Schematic Editor as the component is being placed or after the component has been placed on a schematic sheet in the Properties panel.

  • To edit the designator during component placement, press the Tab key while the component is floating on the cursor. The Properties panel will open; enter the required designator string. Click the workspace pause button overlay ( ) to resume placement.
  • Continue to place components or press Esc to terminate placement.
  • To edit the designator after placement, double-click on the placed component to open the Properties panel  where the designator can be edited. 

Editing the Designator Display Properties 

The appearance of the designator string, which includes the font type, size, and color, can be configured on the Schematic - Defaults page of the Preferences dialog. These settings will apply unless overridden by settings defined in the component symbol in the Schematic Library Editor.

The following methods of non-graphical editing are available:

Via the Properties Panel

Panel page: Designator Properties

This method of editing uses the associated Properties panel mode to modify the properties of a designator.

The Designator mode of the Properties panel
The Designator mode of the Properties panel

After placement, the Designator mode of the Properties panel can be accessed in one of the following ways:

  • Double-click on the placed designator.
  • Placing the cursor over the designator then right-click and choose Properties from the context menu.
  • If the Properties panel is already active, select the designator.
The properties can be accessed prior to entering placement mode from the Schematic - Defaults page of the Preferences dialog. This allows the default properties for the object to be changed, which will be applied when placing subsequent objects.

Via a List Panel

Panel pages: SCH List, SCHLIB List, SCH Filter, SCHLIB Filter

List panel allows you to display design objects from one or more documents in tabular format, enabling quick inspection and modification of object attributes. Used in conjunction with appropriate filtering - by using the applicable Filter panel, or the Find Similar Objects dialog - it enables the display of just those objects falling under the scope of the active filter – allowing you to target and edit multiple design objects with greater accuracy and efficiency.

Fixing the Location of the Designator String

The default behavior of the Designator is to auto-position it as a component is rotated during placement. If this behavior is not required, turn off the Autoposition option in the Preferences dialog (refer to the previous image) either during symbol creation or after the component has been placed on a schematic sheet. Note that doing this sets this parameter to be classified as a manual parameter (meaning manually positioned parameter). Manual parameters are identified by a dot on the lower left corner of their selection box.

Control the display of manual parameter marker dots using the Mark Manual Parameters option on the Schematic - Graphical Editing page of the Preferences dialog.

Notes

  1. The Schematic Editor includes a simple auto-increment feature for the designator that can be used during the placement of multiple instances of the same part. To use this, press Tab while the first component is floating on the cursor and enter a suitable designator, for example R1. Subsequent components will then be designated R2, R3, etc. Note that when you switch to placing a different component type you must again press Tab and enter a suitable designator prefix.
  2. When placing multi-part components and the initial designator is assigned as just described, a part suffix will automatically be assigned, for example, U3A, U3B, etc. If the initial designator is not assigned, all parts will have the same suffix. This is resolved by the Schematic Editor's Annotation command. The part suffix can be alpha or numeric. Use the Alpha Numeric Suffix option on the Schematic - General page of the Preferences dialog to configure.
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Note

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