程序代写代做代考 Microsoft PowerPoint – 048-caring-and-glue-logic

Microsoft PowerPoint – 048-caring-and-glue-logic

9/12/2016

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing

Caring About Don’t Cares
and Glue Logic

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 1

Let’s Have Some Ice Cream!

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 2

Let’s build
something.
Anyone like
ice cream?
Let’s build
an ice cream
dispenser.
Mango and
pistachio!

Start by Specifying the Inputs and Outputs

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 3

inputs: three buttons
◦M(ango): 1 when it’s pushed
◦B(lend): 1 when it’s pushed
◦P(istachio): 1 when it’s pushed

outputs: two 2-bit unsigned numbers
◦CM[1:0]: number of ½ cups of mango
◦CP[1:0]: number of ½ cups of pistachio

The User Has Three Choices (and One Non-Choice)

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 4

Help fill in the truth
table…
Push M, get one cup
of mango.
Push B, get ½ cup of
each.
Push P, get one cup
of pistachio.
Push nothing, get
nothing.

M B P CM CP
0 0 0
0 0 1
0 1 0
0 1 1
1 0 0
1 0 1
1 1 0
1 1 1

10 00

01 01

00 10

00 00

9/12/2016

Fill the Rest with Don’t Cares

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 5

What about the rest?
Who cares?
Fill with x’s.

M B P CM CP
0 0 0 00 00
0 0 1 00 10
0 1 0 01 01
0 1 1
1 0 0 10 00
1 0 1
1 1 0
1 1 1

xx xx

xx xx
xx xx
xx xx

We Need to Solve for Each Output Bit

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 6

Now we can copy
to K-maps. First, CM[1].

CM[1] = M

M B P CM CP
0 0 0 00 00
0 0 1 00 10
0 1 0 01 01
0 1 1 xx xx
1 0 0 10 00
1 0 1 xx xx
1 1 0 xx xx
1 1 1 xx xx

CM[1]
BP

00 01 11 10

M
0

1

x0 00

1 xxx

Solve the Low Bit of Mango

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 7

Next, CM[0].

CM[0] = B

M B P CM CP
0 0 0 00 00
0 0 1 00 10
0 1 0 01 01
0 1 1 xx xx
1 0 0 10 00
1 0 1 xx xx
1 1 0 xx xx
1 1 1 xx xx

CM[0]
BP

00 01 11 10

M
0

1

x0 10

0 xxx

Solve the High Bit of Pistachio

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 8

And CP[1].

CP[1] = P

M B P CM CP
0 0 0 00 00
0 0 1 00 10
0 1 0 01 01
0 1 1 xx xx
1 0 0 10 00
1 0 1 xx xx
1 1 0 xx xx
1 1 1 xx xx

CP[1]
BP

00 01 11 10

M
0

1

x0 01

0 xxx

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Solve the Low Bit of Pistachio

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 9

And, finally, CP[0].

CP[0] = B

M B P CM CP
0 0 0 00 00
0 0 1 00 10
0 1 0 01 01
0 1 1 xx xx
1 0 0 10 00
1 0 1 xx xx
1 1 0 xx xx
1 1 1 xx xx

CP[0]
BP

00 01 11 10

M
0

1

x0 10

0 xxx

The Solution Requires No Gates!

The don’t cares made the functions so simple
that we don’t even need any gates!

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 10

CM[1]
CM[0]

CP[1]
CP[0]

M

B

P

What if a User Pushes Two Buttons?

Let’s be careful.
What happens if a user presses
M and B at the same time?
1.5 cups of
mango

AND
0.5 cups of
pistachio!

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 11

CM[1]
CM[0]

CP[1]
CP[0]

M

B

P

1

1

0

1

1

1

0

Don’t Cares: Not for Human Behavior!

In the best case, the cup overflows
(2 cups of ice cream instead of 1 cup).
In the worst case,
◦ the engineer of the mechanical system
◦assumed that we would not send 11, and
◦ something worse happens when we do.
So we DO care.
Generally, using don’t cares when humans
are involved is a bad idea.

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 12

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Let’s Clean Up the Inputs

How can we fix the problem?
One approach:
◦choose specific outputs
for each combination of inputs,

◦ then solve the K-maps again.
Another approach:
◦ clean up the inputs with more logic
◦prevent humans from ever
producing bad combinations.

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 13

Use Glue Logic to Ensure that Assumptions Hold

For example, we can force all inputs to
zero if the human presses more than one
button.
Each of the AND
gates produces
a 1 iff the
corresponding
button is the
ONLY 1 entered.

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 14

CM[1]
CM[0]

CP[1]
CP[0]

M

B

P

glue logic (dashed box)

The Inputs Can be Cleaned Up in Many Ways

Forcing invalid input combinations to zero
is just one strategy.
We could also choose a priority on the buttons
(six possible choices).
For example:
◦Pistachio overrides other buttons, and
◦Mango overrides Blend.

Or use a combination of approaches.

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 15

What About Picking Specific K-Maps?

In the case of our ice cream dispenser and the
strategy shown, the two approaches are the
same (just remove the dashed box!).
In general, however,
◦ these approaches vary
◦ in area, speed, and/or power.

Cleaning up the inputs is perhaps
easier to understand.

ECE 120: Introduction to Computing © 2016 Steven S. Lumetta. All rights reserved. slide 16

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