I have a VHDL background and this book was recommended to me. It made a smoooth transition into verilog. I read the book globally and then kept the book as a reference on my desk. If I needed something specific like file I/O and generating vectors, I used the example as a template to complete my ver
Verilog Quickstart: A Practical Guide to Simulation and Synthesis in Verilog, 2nd Edition (The International Series in Engineering and Computer Science)
โ Scribed by James M. Lee
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 347
- Edition
- 2nd
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
From a review of the Second Edition 'If you are new to the field and want to know what "all this Verilog stuff is about," you've found the golden goose. The text here is straight forward, complete, and example rich -mega-multi-kudos to the author James Lee. Though not as detailed as the Verilog reference guides from Cadence, it likewise doesn't suffer from the excessive abstractness those make you wade through. This is a quick and easy read, and will serve as a desktop reference for as long as Verilog lives. Best testimonial: I'm buying my fourth and fifth copies tonight (I've loaned out/lost two of my others).' Zach Coombes, AMD
โฆ Table of Contents
Preliminaries......Page 1
TABLE OF CONTENTS......Page 6
1 INTRODUCTION......Page 24
2 INTRODUCTION TO THE VERILOG LANGUAGE......Page 32
3 STRUCTURAL MODELING......Page 42
4 BEHAVIORAL MODELING......Page 56
5 OPERATORS......Page 94
6 WORKING WITH BEHAVIORAL MODELING......Page 110
7 USER-DEFINED PRIMITIVES......Page 156
8 PARAMETERIZED MODULES......Page 166
9 STATE MACHINES......Page 174
10 MODELING TIPS......Page 190
11 MODELING STYLE TRADE-OFFS......Page 222
12 TEST BENCHES AND TEST MANAGEMENT......Page 236
13 COMMON ERRORS......Page 260
14 DEBUGGING A DESIGN......Page 270
Appendix A GATE LEVEL DETAILS......Page 304
Appendix B EXAMPLE SUMMARY......Page 322
INDEX......Page 336
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
I have a VHDL background and this book was recommended to me. It made a smoooth transition into verilog. I read the book globally and then kept the book as a reference on my desk. If I needed something specific like file I/O and generating vectors, I used the example as a template to complete my ver
<p>From a review of the Second Edition <BR><STRONG>'</STRONG>If you are new to the field and want to know what "all this Verilog stuff is about," you've found the golden goose. The text here is straight forward, complete, and example rich -mega-multi-kudos to the author James Lee. Though not as deta
This textbook provides a starterโs guide to Verilog, to be used in conjunction with a one-semester course in Digital Systems Design, or on its own for readers who only need an introduction to the language. This book is designed to match the way the material is actually taught in the classroom. Topic