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A practical primer for the student and practicing engineer already familiar with the basics of digital design, the reference develops a working grasp of the VHLD hardware description language step-by-step using easy-to-understand examples. Starting with a simple but workable design sample, increasingly more complex fundamentals of the language are introduced until all core features of VHDL are brought to light. Included in the coverage are state machines, modular design, FPGA-based memories, clock management, specialized I/O, and an introduction to techniques of simulation. The goal is to prepare the reader to design real-world FPGA solutions. All the sample code used in the book is available online. What Strunk and White did for the English language with โThe Elements of Style,โ VHDL BY EXAMPLE does for FPGA design. Review: Profoundly simple. A great starting point into FPGA design for an experienced student or engineer. - For example, a software engineer can read this primer tutorial in a weekend and then decide how they want to approach further learning in the subject. I happened to buy this book along with Ben Cohen's VHDL book, which reads much more like a reference guide. The two together are perfect because the Readler book give you enough of a quick introduction and overview that you can get going with a development board right away using Cohen as a language reference. Of course, you'll also want to read through your chip's vendor guides, but those can be numerous and scattered, and sometimes it isn't easy to find a starting point. This book gives you a great set of first steps and it's very reasonably priced. It doesn't skip or ignore more advanced material, but it ties them in via keywords, references, and pointers rather than devoting large sections or chapters to them. This lets you build a strong foundation nice and fast. Well worth the 5 stars. Pros: - Very few typos. Don't mind the one on the back cover, ha! - Gives you a strong start with just enough breadth and depth, and does so quickly. - Early examples give code, schematic, and waveform and avoid elaborate explanation. Perfectly sufficient for a quick reader. Cons: - Illustrates some combinatorial code at the start, but spends most of the book giving behavioural code examples with the "process" keyword. Although this will let you write sequential code quickly and more tersely, not every circuit will benefit from this style. More combinatorial examples might have been nice, however there's no shortage of these examples from the major chip vendors. Review: Great book for engineering students - This was a recommended book for my Reconfigurable Computing course and I am really glad I bought it. The actual textbook for the course has many syntax errors in the examples but this book is full of well chosen and really useful examples. Great for someone who knows programming or the basics of digital design.
| Best Sellers Rank | #760,391 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #10,956 in Engineering (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 113 Reviews |
M**A
Profoundly simple. A great starting point into FPGA design for an experienced student or engineer.
For example, a software engineer can read this primer tutorial in a weekend and then decide how they want to approach further learning in the subject. I happened to buy this book along with Ben Cohen's VHDL book, which reads much more like a reference guide. The two together are perfect because the Readler book give you enough of a quick introduction and overview that you can get going with a development board right away using Cohen as a language reference. Of course, you'll also want to read through your chip's vendor guides, but those can be numerous and scattered, and sometimes it isn't easy to find a starting point. This book gives you a great set of first steps and it's very reasonably priced. It doesn't skip or ignore more advanced material, but it ties them in via keywords, references, and pointers rather than devoting large sections or chapters to them. This lets you build a strong foundation nice and fast. Well worth the 5 stars. Pros: - Very few typos. Don't mind the one on the back cover, ha! - Gives you a strong start with just enough breadth and depth, and does so quickly. - Early examples give code, schematic, and waveform and avoid elaborate explanation. Perfectly sufficient for a quick reader. Cons: - Illustrates some combinatorial code at the start, but spends most of the book giving behavioural code examples with the "process" keyword. Although this will let you write sequential code quickly and more tersely, not every circuit will benefit from this style. More combinatorial examples might have been nice, however there's no shortage of these examples from the major chip vendors.
T**S
Great book for engineering students
This was a recommended book for my Reconfigurable Computing course and I am really glad I bought it. The actual textbook for the course has many syntax errors in the examples but this book is full of well chosen and really useful examples. Great for someone who knows programming or the basics of digital design.
A**O
Easy to Learn From
Very good book. I felt like I was easily able to understand the concepts and syntax. The examples really helped. Just be aware that this book expects you to be well versed in digital logic design and doesn't teach you everything-but no book will really teach you everything!
D**D
Excellent Value for Time and Money
For whatever reason, even though I'd been studying VHDL from various sources before reading this book, this was the one that finally put it all together for me. It taught me some ingeniously simple programming practices that I never would have come up with myself. And even though it covers a lot of material, I got through it in only a few hours. The index at the back of the book isn't complete, nor does it cross reference enough different terms. But the book is short enough that you can flip through it to find what you are looking for pretty fast. It offers excellent value for the time and money.
A**W
Good for a quick and dirty intro to VHDL and FPGA's
The second paragraph of the introduction tells you all you need to know: " The material is intended for students and engineers, both hardware and software, who already have a working knowledge of digital design and operation. It is not an instructional text on how to design logic. Additionally, it is intended to provide a very quick entry into VHDL basics; it is not a comprehensive reference. But I'm sure you didn't expect that for less than $20" As promised, the book gives you a crash course in the basics of FPGA design, what you're looking at in VHDL, and some basic implementations of common logic. If you've found yourself working on FPGA's professionally, this will be a helpful crash course, but you will find yourself needing better references on tools and design methodology.
D**U
Learning by examples it is the best approach for me
It covers all I needed to start writing VHDL. Learning by examples it is the best approach for me. Clear and effective explanations. Great and inexpensive book to start learning VHDL.
R**R
Must have for every engineer using VHDL. +5 stars
If anyone could make VHDL fun and easy to learn, it is Blaine Readler. Would highly recommend it to a beginner or or someone brushing up on skills they haven't used in a while.
E**A
If you are an experienced IC designer who needs to ...
If you are an experienced IC designer who needs to learn the core concepts of VHDL in a day to be able to start coding, that's the book you are after.
M**I
good
it is a good book for the price however it was not what I was expecting. Some examples but not detailed description.
D**E
Ottimo per iniziare
Ottimo articolo per introdursi al linguaggio di descrizione dell'hardware VHDL e al mondo delle FPGA. Con questo pratico libro si possono imparare le basi di progettazione digitale specifico per FPGA sfruttando la potenza del tipizzato VHDL
N**H
Very concise with easy to follow examples
Very concise with easy to follow examples. Gives you a great introduction by giving you enough of an understanding to feel confident in your projects
J**.
The best VHDL intro I have found
The best VHDL intro I have found. A must have book for beginners. (Trust me - you will regret not starting with this)
R**T
Not good for any experience level 0 to max
All contain in this book available online in free. Don't waste time and money on this book
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
4 days ago