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The FPGA Programming Handbook

You're reading from   The FPGA Programming Handbook An essential guide to FPGA design for transforming ideas into hardware using SystemVerilog and VHDL

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805125594
Length 550 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Guy Eschemann Guy Eschemann
Author Profile Icon Guy Eschemann
Guy Eschemann
Frank Bruno Frank Bruno
Author Profile Icon Frank Bruno
Frank Bruno
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to FPGA Architectures FREE CHAPTER 2. FPGA Programming Languages and Tools 3. Combinational Logic 4. Counting Button Presses 5. Let’s Build a Calculator 6. FPGA Resources and How to Use Them 7. Math, Parallelism, and Pipelined Design 8. Introduction to AXI 9. Lots of Data? MIG and DDR2 10. A Better Way to Display – VGA 11. Bringing It All Together 12. Using the PMOD Connectors – SPI and UART 13. Embedded Microcontrollers Using the Xilinx MicroBlaze 14. Advanced Topics 15. Other Books You May Enjoy
16. Index

Bringing It All Together

Take a deep breath and reflect on what you’ve accomplished in getting to this point in the book. You started the journey with little or no HDL coding knowledge and were unaware of how to build hardware in an FPGA or build a simple testbench. Over the course of this book, you’ve gone from simple logic functions utilizing switches to light LEDs to writing text out on a VGA screen.

In this chapter, we’ll investigate the Personal System/2 (PS/2) interface, which, although antiquated, is a way of communicating with a keyboard or mouse that Digilent has chosen to use. We’ll then be taking our VGA from Chapter 10, A Better Way to Display – VGA, and adapting it to display more data than the resolution we currently have selected. We’ll use it to output scan codes from the keyboard so that you can see how it operates. We’ll also adapt our temperature sensor to display on the VGA. Finally, we’ll take the audio...

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