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thedougd | 2 months ago
I started designing my modules, a ROM, a register with a ROM pointer, etc, etc, writing the Verilog and working out the clock sync between modules. Then I got 'lazy' and wrote a trie tree like implementation in Java, and have it spit out the whole tree in Verilog. It worked and just one clock cycle after the last letter my number would output. Fastest in the class! Also the most number of gates in the class. Surprised I got a 90 grade given I didn't use any of the advanced ASIC design the class taught. The TA didn't know what the hell they were looking at.
weli|2 months ago
retrac|2 months ago
It's a common pitfall for those learning hardware description languages like Verilog, when they think about them like programming languages. If you go "if (calc) res <= a * b;" If res is 32 bits wide then you have instantiated a 32 bit fast multiplier circuit dedicated just to that one operation. This is often not what was intended.
Despite how leaning on the analogy too closely can mislead in that way, the analogy between hardware and software is not a shallow one. A combinatorial circuit is akin to the pure function of functional programming. Anything that can be described as a pure function working on fixed integers or floating point or other discrete data types, can be transformed into a combinatorial circuit. And there are algorithms to do so automatically and often with reasonable efficiency.
Free software synthesis has come a long way in recent years, by the way. There's even several hobbyist projects that can take VHDL or Verilog and produce layouts using TTL chips or even discrete transistor logic with automatic circuit board layout. You can now compile your code directly to circuit board copper masks and a part list.