The two books I started with are:
Verilog HDL Synthesis, a practical primer, by J. Bhasker
Digital Design and Synthesis with Verilog HDL, by Sternheim, Singh,
Madhavan, Trivedi
It's been a LONG time, so I don't remember how good they are.
There's also this one:
HDL Chip Design, by Douglas J. Smith
This last one is very useful for someone with VHDL experience, because
it has side-by-side examples in both languages. I think I noticed a
few errors in its explanations of a few things about Verilog, but I
don't think they'd be a problem.
Writing good synthesizable code is probably something you can read
about somewhere, but I learned a lot from looking at examples, app
notes, talking to Howard, and experimentation.
On 7/11/07, Attila Kinali <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Moin,
After trying a few of the Verilog books i found in our
library i'm greatly disappointed. All of them were not
on a level i'd expect from course material. Item.
Does anyone have a good advice for a Verilog book i might buy?
Target audience is someone with experience in VHDL. Preferably
it should be something in the style of Ashenden's "The Designer's
Guide to VHDL" with which learning VHDL was a piece of cake.
Thanks in advance
Attila Kinali
--
Praised are the Fountains of Shelieth, the silver harp of the waters,
But blest in my name forever this stream that stanched my thirst!
-- Deed of Morred
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