Design Recipes For FPGAs

Sept. 12, 2007
By Peter Wilson
ISBN: 978-0-7506-6845-3
Looking at an FPGA to solve your problems? Need to learn VHDL? Then pick up Design Recipes For FPGAs by Peter Wilson. It is not an in-depth intro to VHDL and FPGA design. Instead, it’s a nice overview chock-full of useful hardware examples/recipes. The book starts with the essentials of FPGA design and VHDL. It covers all the language details used in the rest of the book, which is ideal for novice FPGA designers. The chapter on design automation and testing is a good generic overview of the topic. The flow then moves onto more interesting designs including a simple embedded processor – nothing fancy, but fully functional. The book then moves onto a host of other useful definitions including serial interfaces with various encoding schemes, digital filters, encryption, display interfaces and so on. The tail end of the book goes into synthesis and optimization. It covers details like critical path analysis and standards like VHDL-AMS, and encompasses all topics worth covering while remaining and easy read with lots of code examples. It finally wraps up with a series of chapters on the basics like finite state machines and fixed-point arithmetic. The approach is generic enough to be a good complement for any FPGA design tool you might use, assuming it will handle VHDL.
About the Author

William G. Wong | Senior Content Director - Electronic Design and Microwaves & RF

I am Editor of Electronic Design focusing on embedded, software, and systems. As Senior Content Director, I also manage Microwaves & RF and I work with a great team of editors to provide engineers, programmers, developers and technical managers with interesting and useful articles and videos on a regular basis. Check out our free newsletters to see the latest content.

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I earned a Bachelor of Electrical Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology and a Masters in Computer Science from Rutgers University. I still do a bit of programming using everything from C and C++ to Rust and Ada/SPARK. I do a bit of PHP programming for Drupal websites. I have posted a few Drupal modules.  

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