On 5/28/06, Attila Kinali <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

I'd buy and read any good book. But i need a bigger bookshelf :)

For VHDL i suggest "The Designer's Guide to VHDL"
from Peter J. Ashenden (Morgan Kaufmann Publishers).
It's so far the best book i got my hands on. It teaches from the basics
up to a quite good level. It does not teach the basics of
VLSI design though!

Apropos. Does anyone know a good book/site/whatever to
teach people the basics, the methodologies and the tricks
of VLSI design? This will become an issue as soon as some
newbies will try to apply their knowledge from software
coding to hardware.

Well, my vote is for Verilog.  Verilog is a good language for
synthesis and acceptable for behavioral simulations.  Everything I've
done up to this point has been in Verilog, so I'll be more efficient
and accurate with it.

The book that has VHDL and Verilog side-by-side is "HDL Chip Design"
by Douglas J. Smith.

Another book I have is "Verilog HDL Synthesis: A Practical Primer" by
J. Bhasker.

And another one is "Digital Design and Synthesis with Verilog HDL" by
Sternheim, Singh, Madhavan, and Trivedi.
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