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FPGA Programming for Beginners

You're reading from  FPGA Programming for Beginners

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789805413
Pages 368 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Frank Bruno Frank Bruno
Profile icon Frank Bruno

Table of Contents (16) Chapters

Preface 1. Section 1: Introduction to FPGAs and Xilinx Architectures
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to FPGA Architectures and Xilinx Vivado 3. Section 2: Introduction to Verilog RTL Design, Simulation, and Implementation
4. Chapter 2: Combinational Logic 5. Chapter 3: Counting Button Presses 6. Chapter 4: Let's Build a Calculator 7. Chapter 5: FPGA Resources and How to Use Them 8. Chapter 6: Math, Parallelism, and Pipelined Design 9. Section 3: Interfacing with External Components
10. Chapter 7: Introduction to AXI 11. Chapter 8: Lots of Data? MIG and DDR2 12. Chapter 9: A Better Way to Display – VGA 13. Chapter 10: Bringing It All Together 14. Chapter 11: Advanced Topics 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Implementing our first state machine

In general, a state machine takes in a number of events and, based on the events, moves through a set of states that can produce one or more outputs. A state machine can be quite simple or extremely complex. In the previous chapter, we designed a simple circuit to control our 7-segment display. The 7-segment controller contained two counters that cycled a zero through the cathodes and presented the anode data for each digit. We could have written a state machine to handle this; however, it was easier to write it the way we did.

Before we dive into our calculator project, we need to go over the two ways of coding state machines and the two traditional state machine implementations.

Writing a purely sequential state machine

The first way of coding a state machine is to write it in a single always block driven by a clock.

This kind of state machine would look something like this:

enum bit {IDLE, DATA} state;
initial state = IDLE; /...
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