What is a .SPICE file?
A .spice file describes a circuit for the SPICE simulator.
- Did you know
- SPICE has been the standard circuit-simulation engine since the 1970s.
- SPICE stands for Simulation Program with Integrated Circuit Emphasis and was first presented by Berkeley in 1973.
- It grew out of an earlier program called CANCER, rewritten so it could be placed in the public domain.
- What Analyser reads
- Open scientific, medical and engineering files: DICOM scans, NIfTI brain volumes, Garmin FIT/TCX activities, FITS astronomy frames, FASTA/FASTQ sequences, chemistry structures (MOL/SDF/MOL2/CIF/XYZ), Gerber/Excellon PCB data, SPICE netlists, EDF/BDF biosignals, JCAMP-DX spectra, SPSS/Stata/SAS datasets and VTK/ParaView meshes - metadata extracted entirely in-browser.
- Depth of analysis
- .SPICE is an identification-grade format: Analyser recognises it from its bytes and decodes the header metadata it carries, rather than opening it in a full viewer. Formats that do get a full viewer are marked "Full" on the formats page.
- Open a .SPICE file
- Drag a .SPICE file onto the Analyser home page (or tap to pick one). It is identified entirely in your browser - nothing is uploaded, there is no account, and it works offline once installed.