Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Electrodoc positions itself as “Electronics in your hand” and showcases a set of mobile apps for electronics engineering from IODEMA Srl, including Electrodoc, PartSeeker, PICmicro Database, and ATmicro Database. Judging from the site structure, it is more of a pocket reference toolkit for hardware and embedded engineers than a conventional code development platform.
In terms of features and use cases, the site clearly highlights electronics tool apps, component lookup apps, and PICmicro and ATmicro microcontroller databases. It is suitable for quickly looking up information during debugging, part selection, learning, or on-site repair. The site lists a range of supported platforms across pages and forms, including Android, iOS, Windows Phone, BlackBerry, and Windows, but it does not clarify whether the exact feature set is the same on each platform. It also provides Change Log, Gallery, FAQ, Reviews, and Contact sections, which are enough for basic product understanding and issue feedback.
Regarding open source vs. closed source, the site does not provide source code, license details, or repository information, so it is not possible to determine whether it is open source. There is also no mention of self-hosting. Notably, the site includes entries such as Plugins, Available Plugins, and Plugins – Info for developers, suggesting that Electrodoc may have a plugin mechanism and offers some extension information for developers. However, the crawled content does not include a plugin API, SDK, development workflow, or examples, making it difficult to assess the maturity of its ecosystem.
Pricing information is limited. The contact form includes categories such as Purchase problem and License problem, and asks users to select stores such as Google Play, Amazon, iTunes, and Microsoft. This suggests that the products may be purchased or licensed through app stores, but prices, free versions, subscriptions, or one-time purchase options are not disclosed. For support, the site provides an FAQ and a contact form, with categories for feature requests, bugs, purchase issues, and license issues. The support entry points are clear, but there is no SLA or response-time commitment.
Its strengths are a clear tool-oriented positioning, coverage of electronics references, component lookup, and microcontroller databases, plus signs of multi-platform distribution. Its weaknesses are the limited public information: it is not possible to verify database completeness, offline capability, update frequency, or advanced features. It is suitable for electronics engineers, embedded developers, hardware hobbyists, and students as a mobile auxiliary reference tool. It is not a good fit for development teams that need API integration, team collaboration, or self-hosting capabilities.
The site does not provide information about access, payments, or localization for mainland China. If it relies on stores such as Google Play, Amazon, iTunes, or Microsoft, the actual download and payment experience may vary depending on the user’s region, store account, and network environment. Users in China may also want to consider domestically accessible electronics calculators, component lookup tools, or official vendor selection resources as alternatives.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on electrodoc.it official site.
electrodoc.it is an Italy Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach electrodoc.it directly.