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Chapter 10 Introduction to VHDL
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Introduction to VHDL As digital systems have become more complex, detailed design of the systems at the gate and flip-flop level has become very tedious and time consuming. For this reason, the use of hardware description languages in the digital design process continues to grow in importance. A hardware description language allows a digital system to be designed and debugged at a higher level before implementation VHDL is a hardware description language that is used to describe the behaviorand structure of digital systems.
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Introduction to VHDL The acronym VHDL stands for VHSIC Hardware Description Language VHSIC in turn stands for Very High Speed Integrated Circuit. However, VHDL is a general-purpose hardware description language which can be used to describe and simulate the operation of a wide variety of digital VHDL was originally developed to allow a uniform method for specifying digital systems. The VHDL language became an IEEE standard in 1987, and it is widely used in industry
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VHDL Description of Combinational Circuits
VHDL leads naturally to a top-down design methodology The system is first specified at a high level and tested using a simulator.
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VHDL Description of Combinational Circuits
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Clock in VHDL
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Clock in VHDL
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VHDL example 1
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VHDL example 2
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Inertial delay model
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VHDL Models for Multiplexers
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Cascading MUXes
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4-to-1 MUX
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Testing 10-7 in VHDL
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VHDL Modules: Example
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Testing 10-8 in VHDL
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VHDL Modules: General Form
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Testing VHDL: 1 bit Full Adder
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VHDL: 4-bit Full Adder
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Simulating the 4-bit Adder
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VHDL Syntax Signal: Constant: User defined types arrays:
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ROM VHD Description
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Latches and Flip-Flops
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Input to output (simple Example)
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