Verilog Styles for Synthesis of Digital Systems

| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.57 (999 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 0201618605 |
| Format Type | : | paperback |
| Number of Pages | : | 314 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2015-12-10 |
| Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
He provides free resources to anyone who works with teenagers on his website, DavidRSmith. . David R. Smith is a 15-year youth ministry veteran who helps youth workers and parents through his writing, training, and speaking. David specializes in sharing the gospel, and equipping others do the same
"Excellent book" according to Rajesh Rathi. This book very concisely explains how to synthesizable verilog code. A beginner with no idea of HDL concepts might get overwhelmed. I would recommend beginners to start with Verilog HDL by Samir Palnitkar and then move on to this book.Definitely a must have.. "Very vague and broad" according to Xycid. I was very excited when I saw this book hoping it'd open me all of the secrets of not-known-until-now world of HDL Synthesis. How wrong I was. The title is very misleading, the book spends just a few pages on synthesis. Overall, this book might be useful for a novice, but even for me, an und. "Excellent Treatment of Verilog and PLD Methodology" according to James Saturn. I have been a user of VHDL for the last three years and am now beginning to use Verilog, mostly because I am now doing ASIC development. For the new Verilog user, this book is excellent because it covers the gamut for an HDL and FPGA designer -- the syntax of the language,the difference betw
Alternative Writing Styles. Control-Point Writing Style. For anyone wanting an accessible, accelerated introduction to the cutting-edge tools for Digital Hardware Design.. Design Approaches for Single Modules. Synthesis to Standard Cells. Simulation. Managing Complexity--Large Designs. Improving Timing, Area, and Power. Synthesis to FPGA. This book is designed specifically to make the cutting-edge techniques of digital hardware design more accessible to those just entering the field.
Currently hardware synthesis is complex and not at all like the software compilation to which it is superficially analogous. All we can do is try to choose some of the best tools currently available and trust that many of the issues faced by users in other environments will be similar. Of course this is somewhat specific and the reader's location may be committed to alternative tools. For readers who want to try the examples, refer to the home page prepared for the Prentice Hall site at the url prenhall/smith/franzon. On the other hand, custom integrated circuits are being supplanted by field programmable gate arrays (FPGA) for many applications. What is needed is another standardization and simplification like that of Mead and Conway, which availed an earlier VLSI te
