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Nov 24, 2024
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ET 212B - Digital Logic I Credits: 4 Description This course is the first semester of a one-year of courses on digital logic. It covers number systems, logic gates, Boolean algebra and Karnaugh mapping, binary arithmetic and adders, combinational/sequential circuits and their applications. Students taking this course should have a basic understanding of electrical/electronics theory.
Student Learning Outcomes
- Distinguish the advantages between digital circuits versus analog circuits and straight binary codes verses BCD codes.
- Perform conversions between binary, decimal and hexadecimal.
- Evaluate logic circuits and their outputs using Boolean algebra.
- Design digital circuits using Karnaugh Maps and DeMorgan theorm. Implement the Boolean expressions that result from the design as working circuits.
- Implement digital circuits that do binary arithmetic operations.
- Analyze parallel adder with 2’s-complement.
- Distinguish advantages between asynchronous counters and synchronous counters.
- Build a frequency counters.
Prerequisite: None Corequisite: None Graded: Letter Grade
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