Intended for an introductory course in digital logic design. The authors provide a balance between classical and modern design approaches. Basic concepts are introduced using simple log circuits, which are designed by using both manual techniques and modern CAD-tool-based methods.
Stephen Brown received the Ph.D and M.A.Sc degrees in Electrical Engineering from the University of Toronto, and his B.A.Sc degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of New Brunswick. He joined the University of Toronto faculty in 1992, where he now holds the rank of Professor in the Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering. He also holds the position of Architect at the Altera Toronto Technology Center, a world-leading research and development site for CAD software and FPGA architectures, where he is involved in research activities and is the Director of the Altera University Program.
His research interests include field-programmable VLSI technology, CAD algorithms, and computer architecture. He won the Canadian Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Councils 1992 Doctoral Prize for the best Ph.D. thesis in Canada.
He has won multiple awards for excellence in teaching electrical engineering, computer engineering, and computer science courses. He is a coauthor of more than 60 scientific research papers and three textbooks: Fundamentals of Digital Logic with Verilog Design , Fundamentals of Digital Logic with VHDL Design , and Field-Programmable Gate Arrays .
Mostly a good book but it really annoyed me that the texts and images are out of order; he frequently references things that only show up like two pages forwards and it makes the reading experience awful fuck this book
An amazing book on the field of Digital Logic. My first insight to the Digital World.An easy & interesting book,which makes the readers interested in this subject.
Brown and Vranesic provide a good introduction to digital logic and Verilog - however, the lack of worked examples and detailed solutions at times make this textbook difficult to study from.