Digital System Design with FPGA: Implementation Using Verilog and VHDL
<p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-size:12.0pt;line-height:107%;font-family:"Times New Roman",serif"><b>Publisher's Note: Products purchased from Third Party sellers are not guaranteed by the publisher for quality, <span style="white-space:pre"></span>authenticity, or access to any online entitlements included with the product.</b><o:p></o:p></span></p><p><strong><br></strong></p><p><strong>Master FPGA digital system design and implementation with Verilog and VHDL</strong></p><p>This practical guide explores the development and deployment of FPGA-based digital systems using the two most popular hardware description languages, Verilog and VHDL. Written by a pair of digital circuit design experts, the book offers a solid grounding in FPGA principles, practices, and applications and provides an overview of more complex topics. Important concepts are demonstrated through real-world examples, ready-to-run code, and inexpensive start-to-finish projects for both the Basys and Arty boards.</p><p><em>Digital System Design with FPGA: Implementation Using Verilog and VHDL</em> covers:</p><p>• Field programmable gate array fundamentals<br>• Basys and Arty FPGA boards<br>• The Vivado design suite<br>• Verilog and VHDL<br>• Data types and operators<br>• Combinational circuits and circuit blocks<br>• Data storage elements and sequential circuits<br>• Soft-core microcontroller and digital interfacing<br>• Advanced FPGA applications<br>• The future of FPGA<br></p><p>“I joined Xilinx five years ago and have looked for a good, introductory book on FPGA-based design ever since because people have repeatedly asked me for my recommendation. Today, I found a brand new book to recommend to people wanting to learn about using programmable logic to design digital systems. It’s titled ― <i>Digital Systems Design with FPGA: Implementation Using Verilog and VHDL</i> and…[it] will take you from the basics of digital design and logic into FPGAs; FPGA architecture including programmable logic, block RAM, DSP slices, FPGA clock management, and programmable I/O; hardware description languages with an equal emphasis on Verilog and VHDL; the Xilinx Vivado Design Environment; and then on to IP cores including the Xilinx MicroBlaze and PicoBlaze soft processors. The book ends with 24 advanced embedded design projects.†– Steve Leibson, Xcell Daily Blog</p>