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Kirjailija

James P. Hanna

Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 2 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 1996-2013, suosituimpien joukossa Using WAVES and VHDL for Effective Design and Testing. Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.

2 kirjaa

Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 1996-2013.

Using WAVES and VHDL for Effective Design and Testing

Using WAVES and VHDL for Effective Design and Testing

James P. Hanna; Robert G. Hillman; Herb L. Hirsch; Tim H. Noh; Ranga R. Vemuri

Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
2013
nidottu
2 Concept ( Tools • Specification ( Tools + Design Stages ( Tools • Implementation ( Tools Figure 1-1. A nominal, multi-stage development process From that beginning, we have progressed to the point where the EDA community at large, including both users and developers of the tools, are interested in more unified environments. Here, the notion is that the tools used at the various stages in the development process need to be able to complement each other, and to communicate with one another efficiently using effective file exchange capabilities. Furthermore, the idea of capturing all the tool support needed for an EDA development into a unified support environment is now becoming a reality. This reality is evidenced by some of the EDA suites we now see emerging, wherein several tool functions are integrated under a common graphical user interface (GUI), with supporting file exchange and libraries to enable all tool functions to operate effectively and synergistically. This concept, which we illustrate in Figure 1- 2, is the true future ofEDA.
Using WAVES and VHDL for Effective Design and Testing

Using WAVES and VHDL for Effective Design and Testing

James P. Hanna; Robert G. Hillman; Herb L. Hirsch; Tim H. Noh; Ranga R. Vemuri

Springer
1996
sidottu
2 Concept ( Tools • Specification ( Tools + Design Stages ( Tools • Implementation ( Tools Figure 1-1. A nominal, multi-stage development process From that beginning, we have progressed to the point where the EDA community at large, including both users and developers of the tools, are interested in more unified environments. Here, the notion is that the tools used at the various stages in the development process need to be able to complement each other, and to communicate with one another efficiently using effective file exchange capabilities. Furthermore, the idea of capturing all the tool support needed for an EDA development into a unified support environment is now becoming a reality. This reality is evidenced by some of the EDA suites we now see emerging, wherein several tool functions are integrated under a common graphical user interface (GUI), with supporting file exchange and libraries to enable all tool functions to operate effectively and synergistically. This concept, which we illustrate in Figure 1- 2, is the true future ofEDA.