Recommended reference books for VHDL & Verilog
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Recommended reference books for VHDL & Verilog

 
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HDL Book Seller
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Posted: Tue Oct 26, 2004 1:33 am    Post subject: Recommended reference books for VHDL & Verilog Reply with quote

Pick up the best Verilog & VHDL texts available at 2/3 off normal
Amazon prices. At these low prices, the books make a great add to
your reference bookshelf or for your coursework this semester.

We have brand new copies of top HDL reference books available for
purchase at deep discounts off normal Amazon prices. These are brand
new, never opened, still-in-the-wrapper books with CD-ROM from the
last of our overstock inventory. We're clearing them out with deep
discounts. Here's what we have left in stock:

*** The Verilog Hardware Description Language, 4th ed -- 66% off!
The Verilog classic reference text by Thomas & Moorby
Sale price: $39.50 (save $68.50 off the regular Amazon price!)
http://s1.amazon.com/exec/varzea/ts/exchange-glance/Y02Y1786799Y7523789/002-2864309-3424823

*** VHDL Coding Styles and Methodologies, 2nd ed -- 66% off!
Comprehensive VHDL reference text by Ben Cohen, noted VHDL guru
Sale price: $52.00 (save $99.50 off the regular Amazon price!)
http://s1.amazon.com/exec/varzea/ts/exchange-glance/Y03Y5393346Y4012685/002-2864309-3424823

These books are 100% guaranteed to be BRAND NEW and unopened. You
will not find a better price on these two classic HDL references. We
ship quickly, and ship internationally. All shipments are upgraded to
Expedited shipping at no additional cost to you.

The HDL Book Sellers

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rickman
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Posted: Tue Oct 26, 2004 9:08 am    Post subject: Re: Recommended reference books for VHDL & Verilog Reply with quote

HDL Book Seller wrote:
Quote:

*** VHDL Coding Styles and Methodologies, 2nd ed -- 66% off!
Comprehensive VHDL reference text by Ben Cohen, noted VHDL guru
Sale price: $52.00 (save $99.50 off the regular Amazon price!)
http://s1.amazon.com/exec/varzea/ts/exchange-glance/Y03Y5393346Y4012685/002-2864309-3424823

Anyone have this book? How do you like it? I think the "regular" price
is a bit absurd, but the $52 price seems typical for a VHDL book. I
know that Ben Cohen is an expert at VHDL and helped write the standard.
But I don't know if his books are good.

--

Rick "rickman" Collins

rick.collins@XYarius.com
Ignore the reply address. To email me use the above address with the XY
removed.

Arius - A Signal Processing Solutions Company
Specializing in DSP and FPGA design URL http://www.arius.com
4 King Ave 301-682-7772 Voice
Frederick, MD 21701-3110 301-682-7666 FAX
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Rob Young
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Posted: Wed Oct 27, 2004 5:58 pm    Post subject: Re: Recommended reference books for VHDL & Verilog Reply with quote

rickman <spamgoeshere4@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:<417DDBD9.1E02AA6@yahoo.com>...
Quote:
HDL Book Seller wrote:

*** VHDL Coding Styles and Methodologies, 2nd ed -- 66% off!
Comprehensive VHDL reference text by Ben Cohen, noted VHDL guru
Sale price: $52.00 (save $99.50 off the regular Amazon price!)
http://s1.amazon.com/exec/varzea/ts/exchange-glance/Y03Y5393346Y4012685/002-2864309-3424823

Anyone have this book? How do you like it? I think the "regular" price
is a bit absurd, but the $52 price seems typical for a VHDL book. I
know that Ben Cohen is an expert at VHDL and helped write the standard.
But I don't know if his books are good.

--

Rick "rickman" Collins
--snip--


I bought Ben Cohen's book, from HDL Book Seller too. I was happy with
HDL's price and shipping.

Ben Cohen's book has loads of good stuff, such as synthesizable vs.
non-synthesiziable coding suggestions, the "rules" and syntax of VHDL
and so on. Also he has "homework" problems.

I only have 2 complaints about the book. First I have found (and I'm
sorry I don't have the book at my desk to give specific pages) that
there will be a footnote number given in the text but NO FOOTNOTE at
the bottom of the page or on near-by pages. Second, I feel the book
could benefit from a redesign of the layout and graphics. For some
reason, the combination of fonts, spacing and layout makes some pages
very hard to read. That may just be me developing Adult Attention
Deficit Disorder, but it just doesn't "flow" well in places.

Otherwise, between Ben's book (more recent and with good practical
advice for simulation and synthesis) and Kevin Skahill's book (older,
so some of the VHDL syntax is a bit dated) I think I finally have a
grasp on VHDL.

Rob Young
rwdontspammeyoung@ieee.org

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james
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Posted: Wed Oct 27, 2004 10:27 pm    Post subject: Re: Recommended reference books for VHDL & Verilog Reply with quote

On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 01:08:41 -0400, rickman <spamgoeshere4@yahoo.com>
wrote:

Quote:
HDL Book Seller wrote:

*** VHDL Coding Styles and Methodologies, 2nd ed -- 66% off!
Comprehensive VHDL reference text by Ben Cohen, noted VHDL guru
Sale price: $52.00 (save $99.50 off the regular Amazon price!)
http://s1.amazon.com/exec/varzea/ts/exchange-glance/Y03Y5393346Y4012685/002-2864309-3424823

Anyone have this book? How do you like it? I think the "regular" price
is a bit absurd, but the $52 price seems typical for a VHDL book. I
know that Ben Cohen is an expert at VHDL and helped write the standard.
But I don't know if his books are good.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^


Rickman

I have it and find it written much like a college textbook. SO in that
aspect it can be a difficult read for one exposed to VHDL for the
first time and not familiar with college t ype textbooks. He does give
exercises in the chapter and companion CD has some nice extras on it
as well as complete code for teh examples used in the text. Cohen does
go out of the way to point out the major difference between VHDL 87
and VHdl 93 syntax. He shows examples of code fragments that will
cause problems and what will provide trouble free synthesis. What
helped me was the sections on how to avoid the inference of registers
when one does not want them. He also stresses coding techniques for
readability. Overall it is a good reference book and at the price
being offered not to bad. I bougth it at an overstock price like the
one listed.

It does help in teaching VHDL and how it applies to overall design. If
one is doing primarily VHDL for FPGAs then the text along with
documentation from the vendor become a powerful set of documents.

I would reccomend it as a good reference book to have on one's shelf.

james
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