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June 3, 2022 at 1:43 pmWatch & LearnParticipant
Model-Based Development refers to a system and software process based on a model that captures requirements and specifications, architecture, and design of actual the modules, starting with the higher levels of abstraction and proceeding down to the lower ones. In this video, we introduce the main principles of this approach and demonstrate how the ANSYS SCADE Model-Based Solution provides answers to the major issues involved in developing an application, using the Cabin Pressure Control System as an example.
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Introducing Ansys Electronics Desktop on Ansys Cloud
The Watch & Learn video article provides an overview of cloud computing from Electronics Desktop and details the product licenses and subscriptions to ANSYS Cloud Service that are...
How to Create a Reflector for a Center High-Mounted Stop Lamp (CHMSL)
This video article demonstrates how to create a reflector for a center high-mounted stop lamp. Optical Part design in Ansys SPEOS enables the design and validation of multiple...
Introducing the GEKO Turbulence Model in Ansys Fluent
The GEKO (GEneralized K-Omega) turbulence model offers a flexible, robust, general-purpose approach to RANS turbulence modeling. Introducing 2 videos: Part 1 provides background information on the model and a...
Postprocessing on Ansys EnSight
This video demonstrates exporting data from Fluent in EnSight Case Gold format, and it reviews the basic postprocessing capabilities of EnSight.
- Scade One – Bridging the Gap between Model-Based Design and Traditional Programming
- How to Verify a Model on Host with SCADE Test? (Part 4 of 6)
- Scade One – An Open Model-Based Ecosystem, Ready for MBSE
- Scade One – A Visual Coding Experience
- Introduction to the SCADE Environment (Part 1 of 5)
- Using the SCADE Python APIs from your favorite IDE
- Scade One – Democratizing model-based development
- How to Generate Code with SCADE Display (Part 6 of 6)
- How to integrate multiple SCADE models into one executable
- ANSYS SCADE – Map Iterator – Comparison Function: C and SCADE Methods Comparison (Part 4 of 4)
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