yes
1
you will need 2 two input AND gates to do this. connect the output of the first to one input of the second. you now have a three input AND gate. just remember when calculating timing that 2 inputs of the 3 have twice the gate delay of the remaining input, thus the output will have skew and possibly glitches. if timing is critical or glitching can't be tolerated it may be best to use an actual three input AND instead of kludging one.
The big difference is inputs and outputs. Digital ICs expect high/low true/false inputs and outputs. Analog ICs take any inputs, and produce outputs of any level. For example, an audio amplifier is an analog IC. It takes an analog input (sound), and produces an analog output (louder sound). A ripple counter is an example of a digital IC. It takes a digital input (clock pulses), and produces a number of digital outputs (the digital outputs of the flip flops, collectively representing a number in binary).
hi
I assume you mean a differential amplifier. A differential amplifier has two outputs, and two inputs. One input may be grounded out, so there is only one apparent input. When a signal is applied to the non grounded input, it is amplified at one output. The circuitry causes a negative ampification at the other output, so the two outputs taken together give double the output as opposed to using just one.
The salary problem has 2 outputs for each input value.
There are 2 outputs for each positive input value in the Catwalk problem.
A 4-input decoder can produce (2^n) outputs, where (n) is the number of inputs. For a 4-input decoder, (n = 4), so the number of possible outputs is (2^4 = 16). Therefore, a 4-input decoder can generate 16 distinct output lines based on the 4 input combinations.
Yes
Input
Yes, on a RF splitter there are 2 outputs and 1 input, for certain applications, it can be used in reverse to combine 2 inputs into 1 output!
An input/output table works like this:You input something, and through a function, it outputs something else!Say I Had a function that is: input+2If I were to input 5, It would output 7All an input/output table does is displays a couple examples of multiple inputs with their outputs! Put tables only operate on one function....Example:Function: Input x 5 + 3INPUTS - OUTPUTS----------------------1 - 82 - 133 - 186 - 3310 - 53
Input as your using touch to control it and to INPUT data. Output too- Outputs data.
Input, money. Output, transportation.
In a demultiplexer, the address input specifies which output line will be activated based on the binary value provided. For example, if a demultiplexer has four outputs, it requires a 2-bit address input (00, 01, 10, or 11) to select one of those outputs. The selected output corresponds to the binary value of the address input, allowing the demultiplexer to route a single input signal to the designated output.
In a mathematical function, each input is associated with exactly one output. This means that for every specific input value, there can only be one corresponding output value. If an input were to produce multiple outputs, it would no longer qualify as a function.
An input/output table works like this:You input something, and through a function, it outputs something else!Say I Had a function that is: input+2If I were to input 5, It would output 7All an input/output table does is displays a couple examples of multiple inputs with their outputs! Put tables only operate on one function....Example:Function: Input x 5 + 3INPUTS - OUTPUTS----------------------1 - 82 - 133 - 186 - 3310 - 53