Back to Search

Effective Coding with VHDL: Principles and Best Practice

AUTHOR Jasinski, Ricardo
PUBLISHER MIT Press (05/27/2016)
PRODUCT TYPE Hardcover (Hardcover)

Description
A guide to applying software design principles and coding practices to VHDL to improve the readability, maintainability, and quality of VHDL code.

This book addresses an often-neglected aspect of the creation of VHDL designs. A VHDL description is also source code, and VHDL designers can use the best practices of software development to write high-quality code and to organize it in a design. This book presents this unique set of skills, teaching VHDL designers of all experience levels how to apply the best design principles and coding practices from the software world to the world of hardware. The concepts introduced here will help readers write code that is easier to understand and more likely to be correct, with improved readability, maintainability, and overall quality.

After a brief review of VHDL, the book presents fundamental design principles for writing code, discussing such topics as design, quality, architecture, modularity, abstraction, and hierarchy. Building on these concepts, the book then introduces and provides recommendations for each basic element of VHDL code, including statements, design units, types, data objects, and subprograms. The book covers naming data objects and functions, commenting the source code, and visually presenting the code on the screen. All recommendations are supported by detailed rationales. Finally, the book explores two uses of VHDL: synthesis and testbenches. It examines the key characteristics of code intended for synthesis (distinguishing it from code meant for simulation) and then demonstrates the design and implementation of testbenches with a series of examples that verify different kinds of models, including combinational, sequential, and FSM code. Examples from the book are also available on a companion website, enabling the reader to experiment with the complete source code.

Show More
Product Format
Product Details
ISBN-13: 9780262034227
ISBN-10: 0262034220
Binding: Hardback or Cased Book (Sewn)
Content Language: English
More Product Details
Page Count: 624
Carton Quantity: 8
Product Dimensions: 7.20 x 1.40 x 9.00 inches
Weight: 2.40 pound(s)
Feature Codes: Bibliography, Index, Price on Product
Country of Origin: US
Subject Information
BISAC Categories
Computers | Languages - General
Computers | Hardware - General
Computers | Computer Engineering
Grade Level: College Freshman and up
Dewey Decimal: 621.392
Library of Congress Control Number: 2015039698
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
publisher marketing
A guide to applying software design principles and coding practices to VHDL to improve the readability, maintainability, and quality of VHDL code.

This book addresses an often-neglected aspect of the creation of VHDL designs. A VHDL description is also source code, and VHDL designers can use the best practices of software development to write high-quality code and to organize it in a design. This book presents this unique set of skills, teaching VHDL designers of all experience levels how to apply the best design principles and coding practices from the software world to the world of hardware. The concepts introduced here will help readers write code that is easier to understand and more likely to be correct, with improved readability, maintainability, and overall quality.

After a brief review of VHDL, the book presents fundamental design principles for writing code, discussing such topics as design, quality, architecture, modularity, abstraction, and hierarchy. Building on these concepts, the book then introduces and provides recommendations for each basic element of VHDL code, including statements, design units, types, data objects, and subprograms. The book covers naming data objects and functions, commenting the source code, and visually presenting the code on the screen. All recommendations are supported by detailed rationales. Finally, the book explores two uses of VHDL: synthesis and testbenches. It examines the key characteristics of code intended for synthesis (distinguishing it from code meant for simulation) and then demonstrates the design and implementation of testbenches with a series of examples that verify different kinds of models, including combinational, sequential, and FSM code. Examples from the book are also available on a companion website, enabling the reader to experiment with the complete source code.

Show More

Author: Jasinski, Ricardo
Ricardo Jasinski is Founder and Lead Developer at Solvis Ltd.
Show More
Your Price  $55.00
Hardcover