The UI is very productive for a CAD, use/set keys shortcuts and use them instead of clicking menus and icons. In any CAD is the same, use the keyboard or suffer.
Set M for Move, D for Drag, R for resistor, C for Capacitor, P for place Part, W for Wire, Space to fit full view, and so on, a single key press for each action or components. Use the mouse wheel to zoom, and disable schematic autodrag.
They all can be changed from LTspice's control panel, avoid CTRL or other key alterators, though I have CTRL+M for Mirror, and CTRL+R for Rotate.
I agree. You soon get used to it after an hour or so, it’s trivial. Lacking modifier key combos is a boon; single key to learn = faster muscle memory training.
I’m still not gonna be using “Wine” though, as I explained the reason to be that I need a “solid foundation” (Win 7, and not Win XP as someone erroneously assumed I’d meant) for future software installs.
I know Dave has had a similar experience with editing suites with people telling him “you should try X software, no, you really should try, no, you really really really really need to try it!!” and with respect, as good as it is; this works flawlessly for me, and I’m happy not wasting more time on something I don’t need.
I’ve tried restoring this old HP ProBook 6460b to factory Win 7, using the original HP discs, and it has this infuriating habit of deciding to sometimes fully shut down and sometimes not, under ALL versions of Windows I’ve tried (And yes, I fully reset the BIOS).
Time sunk can’t be reclaimed, and since I am always using Linux, and the bash shell is VASTLY superior AND Ubuntu shuts the laptop down first time EVERY SINGLE time, then I’m using it and that’s that. My life is precious to me and I have a hatred of wasting it pandering to idiotic problems which are nearly always IT-based.