Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Introduction to Logic Circuits Chapter 3 Number Representation and Arithmetic Circuits Chapter 4 Combinational-Circuit Building Blocks Chapter 5 Flip-Flop, Registers, and Counters Chapter 6 Synchronous Sequential Circuits Chapter 7 Digital System Design Chapter 8 Optimized Implementation of Logic Functions Chapter 9 Asynchronous Sequential CircuitsChapter 10 Computer Aided Design ToolsChapter 11 Testing of Logic Circuits Appendix A Verilog Reference Appendix B Implementation Technology Answers Index
Stephen Brown received the Ph.D. and M.A.Sc. degrees in Electrical
Engineering from the University of Toronto, and his B.A.Sc. degree
in Electrical Engineering from the University of New Brunswick. He
joined the University of Toronto faculty in 1992, where he is now a
Professor in the Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering.
He is also the Director of FPGA Academic Programs for Intel
Corporation. His research interests include field-programmable
VLSI technology, CAD algorithms, computer architecture, and
applications of machine learning. He won the Canadian Natural
Sciences and Engineering Research Council’s 1992 Doctoral Prize for
the best Ph.D. thesis in Canada, and the New Brunswick
Governor-General’s 1985 award for the highest academic standing in
the Faculty of Engineering. He is a coauthor of more than 150
scientific research papers and two other textbooks: Fundamentals of
Digital Logic with Verilog Design and Field-Programmable Gate
Arrays. He has won many awards for excellence in teaching
electrical engineering, computer engineering, and computer science
courses.
Zvonko Vranesic received his B.A.Sc., M.A.Sc., and Ph.D. degrees,
all in Electrical Engineering, from the University of Toronto. From
1963 to 1965 he worked as a design engineer with the Northern
Electric Co. Ltd. in Bramalea, Ontario. In 1968 he joined the
University of Toronto, where he is now a Professor Emeritus in the
Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering. During the 1978–79
academic year, he was a Senior Visitor at the University of
Cambridge, England, and during 1984–85 he was at the University of
Paris, 6. From 1995 to 2000 he served as Chair of the Division of
Engineering Science at the University of Toronto. He is a
coauthor of four other books: Computer Organization and Embedded
Systems, 6th ed.; Fundamentals of Digital Logic with Verilog
Design, 3rd ed.; Microcomputer Structures; and Field-Programmable
Gate Arrays. In 1990, he received the Wighton Fellowship for
“innovative and distinctive contributions to undergraduate
laboratory instruction.” In 2004, he received the Faculty
Teaching Award from the Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering
at the University of Toronto. He has represented Canada in numerous
chess competitions. He holds the title of International Master.
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