Abstract

An application of computer-aided design is to the design or optimization ofa physical problem which, if not already a network-type problem, can often be mathematically modelled as such. The c.a.d. aspect is, in part, concerned with the analysis of this network. Efficient and fast techniques are outlined for achieving this analysis and examples are given of application. These techniques are based on the Gauss elimination technique for solving the simultaneous equations describing the system's behaviour. These software techniques can form an integral part of the overall c.a.d. problem. The paper was presented at a one-day symposium on Networks, organized by the Computer-Aided Design specialist group of the British Computer Society and held on the 18th March 1974.

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