its simple......just you have to make truth table of input and output ......then u will notice that output column can be obtaining by just replacing it by third input or negation of it...
in some cases output just hav to connect to one or zero input........for the corresponding output
You'l need 5 4 to 1 muxes for making a 16 to 1 mux if your inputs are say W(0)-W(15) i.e 16 inputs ..... you start of with giving 4 inputs each to the 4 to 1 muxes the select lines for all 4 4 to 1 muxes will be common now each of the four 4 to 1 muxes is giving you one o/p so ..... take each of those 4 outputs and give them to the fifth 4 to 1 mux and voila you have a final o/p corresponding to 16 inputs !!! THIS IS HOW IT WILL LOOK LIKE inputs outputs mux 1 : w(0)w(1)w(2)w(3) m(1) mux2 : w(4)w(5)w(6)w(7) m(2) mux3 : w(8)w(9)w(10)w(11) m(3) mux4 : w(12)w(13)w(14)w(15) m(4) taking the above 4 outputs and giving them 2 mux5 mux5 : m(1)m(2)m(3)m(4) m(5) m(5) is the final output corresponding to 16 inputs W(0)-W(15)
Design and draw a combinational circuit using AND-OR-NOT gates that accepts 4 input bits, and produces two bit output; the first of the two bits is set to 1 if the number of 1's in the input is even; and the second of the output bit is set to 1 if the input have 3 or more (all four) 1 bits.
1. By using transformer oils.2. By nitrogen or sulfur hexaflouride gases.3. By using flourinated hydrocarbons4. Case is wide corrugated5. Case is provided with radiators
by using a suitable diagram, explain the one of the operation in microwave energy sources except Guinn Diode.
R = 1/[1/2 + 1/4 + 1/6 + 1/10] Add up the reciprocals of the resistances, and take the reciprocal of the answer.
Personally describing VHDL code for multiplexer can be quite difficult without prior knowledge. It takes many VHDLs to be a multiplexer.
using 8:1 mux....
You don't need two 4-to-1 multiplexers. You only need one 4-to-1 multiplexer, and something that functions as a 2-to-1, like a single 2-input OR gate with one input grounded.
20 address line available in 16 to 1 multiplexer 16 for input lines and 4 will be selection lines.
To build a 64 to 1 multiplexer using cascaded 8 to 1 multiplexer, use nine 8 to 1's. Connect the first 8 to each of the 64 inputs, then connect the ninth to the outputs of the first eight. Connect the three address lines of the eight together to form 3 of the address lines. Connect the three address lines of the ninth to form the other three, for a total of 6 address lines selecting 1 of 64 inputs.This is a lot of logic. Fan-in and fan-out may be considerations. If you are trying to scan 64 switches, there may be a better way using an 8-bit output connected to a switch matrix (with diodes if you need more than one at a time close-able) and then connected to an 8-bit input. Even better, consider the 8279 keyboard/display controller.
You'l need 5 4 to 1 muxes for making a 16 to 1 mux if your inputs are say W(0)-W(15) i.e 16 inputs ..... you start of with giving 4 inputs each to the 4 to 1 muxes the select lines for all 4 4 to 1 muxes will be common now each of the four 4 to 1 muxes is giving you one o/p so ..... take each of those 4 outputs and give them to the fifth 4 to 1 mux and voila you have a final o/p corresponding to 16 inputs !!! THIS IS HOW IT WILL LOOK LIKE inputs outputs mux 1 : w(0)w(1)w(2)w(3) m(1) mux2 : w(4)w(5)w(6)w(7) m(2) mux3 : w(8)w(9)w(10)w(11) m(3) mux4 : w(12)w(13)w(14)w(15) m(4) taking the above 4 outputs and giving them 2 mux5 mux5 : m(1)m(2)m(3)m(4) m(5) m(5) is the final output corresponding to 16 inputs W(0)-W(15)
A 4 to 1 multiplexer has four data lines, typically labeled as D0, D1, D2, and D3. It uses two select lines to choose which of the four data inputs is routed to the output. Therefore, it can select one of four different data inputs based on the values of the select lines.
A byte always contains 8 bit of information(A7, A6 ....A0) . In case you want to use only 4 bits (16 combination) of data then 2 such information can be stored/transmitted through 1 byte, so to select weather your useful data is A0, A1, A2, A3 or A4, A5, A6, A7 a nibble MUX can be used.For detailed help reply me at ishank4043@gmail.com
Advantages are 1: it reduces number of wires. 2:it reduces circuit complexity and cost. 3:it simplifies logic design. 4:we can implement many combinational circuits using MUX. 5:it does not need kmaps and simplification.
1 = 4/4
4 - 4/4 = 4 - 1/1 = 4 - 1 = 3
(4 - 4) - 4/4 equals - 1.