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You do it by studying, and doing your homework by yourself instead of trying to get someone else to do it for you.
The count sequence of a BCD down counter is as follows: 1001,1000,0111,0110,0101,0100,0011,0010,0001,0000,1001. . . . . . .
A digital counter than can count both up and down, selected by a control signal.
If an 8 bit binnery counter chip is used a 8 input and gate is connected to the output of the counter and the output of the and gate is connected to the clock input of the next chip so that when the first counter get to 11111111 all outputs of the counter will be high and it will pulls the second counter once and the first counter will return to 00000000 and count again from 0 to 255 des. THIS IS NOT THE PROPER ANSWER I WAS SEARCHING FOR I NEED THE RIGHT ANSWER.
8 flip flops. a counter composed of n- flip flop and any counter will count from 0 to 2^n - 1. i.e 2^8 - 1=256 - 1 = 255
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The count sequence of a BCD down counter is as follows: 1001,1000,0111,0110,0101,0100,0011,0010,0001,0000,1001. . . . . . .
The count sequence of a BCD down counter is as follows: 1001,1000,0111,0110,0101,0100,0011,0010,0001,0000,1001. . . . . . .
You do it by studying, and doing your homework by yourself instead of trying to get someone else to do it for you.
counter points
1 is the highest number you can count to using a mod-2 counter.
mod 8 counter mod 8 counter
Mesopotamia made numbers because they needed a way to count their goods. They also needed it to sell their goods. They needed to count their money. Mesopotamia made numbers because they needed a way to count their goods. They also needed it to sell their goods. They needed to count their money.
i think its better to count and count and count and think of yourself,your loved ones...thats what matters most...
Probably the same. A frequency counter is specifically intended to count frequencies, but an electronic counter could be counting anything.
The answer is "you can count on me." But of course, you do not "count" on a calculator: you calculate. You can count on your fingers, or on an abacus, or a handheld tally counter.