I spent two weeks last January hand-tracing the power distribution board of a 1978 analog oscilloscope kit. Not because I had to — the service manual was digitized years ago — but because the auto-generated netlist told me nothing about the designer’s intent. The original schematic told me everything.

The Grammar of Connection

Every wire on a schematic is a decision made legible. When R14 connects to the inverting input of U3 rather than the non-inverting one, that placement encodes intent. The IEEE standard 315-1975 doesn’t just specify symbols — it specifies a reading direction: signal flows left to right, power top to bottom. A well-drawn schematic reads like a sentence.

Note The schematic is not a wiring diagram. It is an argument about how a circuit should behave, rendered in a visual language older than most programming paradigms.