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CSCE 211: Digital Logic Design

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1 CSCE 211: Digital Logic Design
Chin-Tser Huang University of South Carolina

2 Chapter 1: Introduction

3 Digital Systems They are everywhere!
They are usually binary: operating on two-valued signals Take an arbitrary number of inputs and produce an arbitrary number of outputs Some systems require a timing signal called clock 08/20/2015

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5 Examples A system with three inputs, A, B, and C, and one output Z, such that Z = 1 if and only if two of the inputs are 1 A system with eight inputs, representing two 4-bit binary numbers, and one 5-bit output, representing the sum 08/20/2015

6 Examples A system with one input, A, plus a clock, and one output, Z, which is 1 iff the input was one at the last three consecutive clock times A traffic controller on two streets: the light is green on each street for a fixed period of time, then goes to yellow for another fixed period and finally to red. The only input to this system is the clock 08/20/2015

7 Truth Table Describe the behavior of a digital system in tabular form
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9 A Brief Review of Number Systems
Integers are usually written using a positional number system N = an-1rn-1 + an-2rn-2 + … + a2r2 + a1r + a0 where 0  ai < r 08/20/2015

10 Conversion between Number Systems
How to convert from binary to decimal? Evaluate the power series Example: = ? 08/20/2015

11 Conversion between Number Systems
How to convert from decimal to binary? Two algorithms Repeatedly subtract from the number the largest power of 2 less than that number and put a 1 in corresponding position Repeatedly divide the number by 2 and put the remainder from right to left 08/20/2015

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14 Hexadecimal Radix r = 16 Why use hexadecimal? Shorthand notation for binary Grouping 4 bits in binary to get 1 digit in hexadecimal 08/20/2015

15 Binary Addition 08/20/2015

16 One-bit Adder 08/20/2015

17 4-bit Adder 08/20/2015

18 Overflow Overflow occurs when the result of an arithmetic operation is out of range and indicates an error For example, in a computer with n-bit words, if the addition of two n-bit integers produces an (n+1)-bit result, we call it overflow 08/20/2015

19 Binary Coded Decimal (BCD)
Most computers operate on binary numbers However, for computers to interface with humans, the mode of communication is generally decimal Convert from decimal to binary on input Convert from binary to decimal on output But the decimal output still needs to be coded into binary, digit by digit 08/20/2015

20 Binary-Coded Decimal Codes
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21 Other Codes ASCII: used to transmit alphanumeric information
Gray code: consecutive numbers differ in only one bit Particularly useful in coding the position of a continuous device and error detection 08/20/2015

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