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FPGA Prototyping Using VHDL Examples: Xilinx Spartan-3 Version
 
 
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FPGA Prototyping Using VHDL Examples: Xilinx Spartan-3 Version [Hardcover]

Pong P. Chu
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 468 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell; First Edition edition (14 Mar 2008)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0470185317
  • ISBN-13: 978-0470185315
  • Product Dimensions: 25.4 x 18.5 x 2.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 162,970 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Pong P. Chu
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Product Description

Review

"The book is well organized and contains many useful synthesizable VHDL examples. Moreover, design concepts are clearly explained … This book is indeed an excellent text for people who wish to learn PFGA and VHDL from practical examples and exercises." (Computing Reviews, February 18, 2009)

"Brimming with code examples, flowcharts and other illustrations, the book serves as a good starting point for a development project.  It′s recommended to anyone looking to get started with FPGA prototyping using VHDL." (Electronic Design, February 4, 2008)

"It′s recommended to anyone looking to get started with FGPA prototyping using VHDL." (Electronic Design Online, February 4, 2008)

Product Description

This book uses a "learn by doing" approach to introduce the concepts and techniques of VHDL and FPGA to designers through a series of hands–on experiments. FPGA Prototyping by VHDL Examples provides a collection of clear, easy–to–follow templates for quick code development; a large number of practical examples to illustrate and reinforce the concepts and design techniques; realistic projects that can be implemented and tested on a Xilinx prototyping board; and a thorough exploration of the Xilinx PicoBlaze soft–core microcontroller.

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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
"The book is well organized and contains many useful synthesizable VHDL examples" states the description. The problem is, having bought a Xilinx Spartan 3A Starter Kit I wanted to get my designs down onto the FPGA. The book starts off with a gentle introduction to combinatorial circuits but even here the book has failed to move on from a card with eight segment displays to the newer Spartan 3A kits which have a LCD display and different locations for things like switch banks which are entered into user constraint files. I would say bring the book up-to-date, show how to realise the sequential designs (just once) and you might have a half decent book. All in all, the book title should be "Learn VHDL with synthesis" then a smaller sub-title "Contains a small nod to Xilinx older boards and struggle to realise your design on silicon" and crikey it was nearly £60!

On a positive note, the latter chapters look good on how to interface to VGAs, Keyboards, PS2 Mouse etc. but it is disappointing to hit a brick wall at chapter 4.
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Very good 1 Nov 2010
Format:Hardcover
Very good book. I found this book very useful in learning VHDL using a Xilinx environment. My only comment would be that the index could do with having more keywords.
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Amazon.com:  7 reviews
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful
The best way to learn VHDL 23 Mar 2008
By El Hombre - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This is one of the best introductory VHDL books out there. Even though it does not focus on the VHDL Language itself it does demonstrate the use of VHDL and the hardware design methodology via practical design examples. All explanantions are clear and easy to follow. The design examples provided in the book are very practical (UART, PS2, VGA controller). The examples themselves are designed using the hardware design methodologies presented (FSM-based and FSMD-based). Finally the Picoblaze section in the textbook is the best treatize of the picoblaze micro that I've seen this far.

For those interested in a more rigourous treatment of the VHDL language, design methodology and synthesis issues (but not practical examples) I also highly recoommend "RTL Hardware Design Using VHDL: Coding for Efficiency, Portability, and Scalability" by the same author.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
Clearing the Fog of FPGAs 7 April 2009
By H. Stewart - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Great book - It states teaching VHDL is not its goal; the goal is FPGA programming in a general way to be transportable across various FPGAs while apologizing for the need to use a specific hardware board for the examples. The board is the Xilinx Spartan-3 evaluation board which is readily available for ~$200. It starts with an easy logic structure and ends with a complex pico-Blaze soft-core embedded processor project. It has memory controllers, LCD and PS/2 keyboard controllers in between. Each example has the full VHDL code and many compare alternate HDL coding approaches. Thus, while VHDL syntax is not covered directly, if you want the construct of a multiplexer or a serial port, or more complex functions, the examples serve as an excellent starting point and will continue to provide solid building blocks for future projects. If you are having difficulty sorting out the starting point in the fog of VHDL, ISE tools, RTL, footprints, and all else related to FPGAs using this book in conjunction with the Xilinx Spartan-3 evaluation board will point you in the right direction. Within a matter of a few days to a couple of weeks you will understand the key elements, the order they are applied and be able to demonstrate them in actual hardware. To become an expert is a long path, finding the trail head is always a good start. Once you are comfortable with the FPGA coding process "Circuit Design with VHDL" by Volnei A. Pedroni is an excellent reference book on VHDL for future projects.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Best book ever written on FPGA...Hands Down! 27 Aug 2009
By Mario Ghecea - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
I have spent many years amassing a collection of every book on FPGA on the market! Ok, maybe that's pushing it...However, compared to what most books lack in practical examples, this one I find is a complete GEM! From the beginning to the end it keeps you going with interesting, real world examples of what can be done with a Digilent Spartan Starter Kit. The author, Prof. P. Chu does an excellent job at progressivelly building your understanding of FPGA logic design, through a series of chapters that gradually take you to the more advanced stages of design in easily comprehensible lessons that require more elevated skills as one approaches the end chapters. The beauty of this book is that it uses the lessons learned prior to take you to the next level. I've used Prof. Chu's samples and interfaced them with a PIC and ARM9 development boards respectivelly, just to spice in some more fun and excitement. I may be considering launching a free site for the microcontroller sample code interfacing to his functional FPGA examples with his prior consent! There are lessons on dealing with numbers, such as the illusive negative integers and floats represented in binary logic. These are not borring discussions. They are well explained and straight to the point, complete with test benches and some of them can even be ran in the Xilinx simulator. The muxing example for LEDs should be the starting point of all experiments. It's that useful! The chapter on circular buffers is alone worth the price of the book! The memory interfacing and the VGA interfacing are priceless chapters as well! Try looking at a Xilinx sample for memory interfacing! PHEW... I cannot rave enough about the amount of work he has put into this...This is not a lazy approach to book writing! It's methodical, complete, well illustrated and there are samples included and they all work as described in the book! If you are new to FPGA, this book may be the top stepping stone you're after! It should be on everybody's book shelf who deals with FPGA logic design and I'm considering buying another one, just in case I loose the first one...Yes, it's that good! Brilliant work Prof. Chu, please keep em' going! It's people like yourself that make VHDL learning fun and exciting again!
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