1 gate.
A full adder can be constructed using basic logic gates: XOR, AND, and OR gates. Specifically, two XOR gates are used to calculate the sum, while two AND gates and one OR gate are employed to determine the carry-out. The first XOR gate takes the two input bits, and the second XOR gate incorporates the carry-in. The AND gates handle the carry generation, with the OR gate combining the outputs to produce the final carry-out.
As such an OR gate should do the job...but if the question is of using gates other than the simple OR, it should be a combo of NOR and NOT gates; where-in, the NOT gate comes after the NOR gate. Factfully speaking: The output of a NOR gate when fed to a NOT gate shall give you an OR gate. cheers :) Anish Murthy Airpula, RF Design Engineer (F.A.E) Ceramic & Microwave Products Group, Dover Corporation Inc, United States of America
You can't make XOR out of NOT alone. Mathematically, NOT takes only a single argument, and its gate, an inverter, takes a single input. There's no way to combine two inputs giving a single output with one input gates. You need some two input gates to do the job. They can be AND, OR, NAND, NOR, or some combination, but you need something. That said, they don't have to be IC gates; you can combine two inputs with diodes to make an OR gate, so you could make XOR with only inverters and diodes, i.e. no other gate symbols on your schematic, but it would mot be making XOR out of NOT.
And, or, xor, xnor, nand, nor, not
Nand, nor, and, or, xor, nxor, not, true.
xor and xnor gates are derived from not gate
yes... xor is derived gate from primary gates
A full adder can be constructed using basic logic gates: XOR, AND, and OR gates. Specifically, two XOR gates are used to calculate the sum, while two AND gates and one OR gate are employed to determine the carry-out. The first XOR gate takes the two input bits, and the second XOR gate incorporates the carry-in. The AND gates handle the carry generation, with the OR gate combining the outputs to produce the final carry-out.
No, XOR gate is a not a universal gate. There are basically two universal gates NAND and NOR.
As such an OR gate should do the job...but if the question is of using gates other than the simple OR, it should be a combo of NOR and NOT gates; where-in, the NOT gate comes after the NOR gate. Factfully speaking: The output of a NOR gate when fed to a NOT gate shall give you an OR gate. cheers :) Anish Murthy Airpula, RF Design Engineer (F.A.E) Ceramic & Microwave Products Group, Dover Corporation Inc, United States of America
basic gates like XOR already exist in VHDL.
All other logic gates can be made using XOR and XNOR, but to get NOT, you need to do (input) XOR 1 or (input) XNOR 0, but with NAND, you don't need 1: (input) NAND (input).
Three 2-input XOR gates and one 3-input NOR gate will do the work. Connect each output of each XOR gate to one input of the 3-input NOR gate and apply the two 3-bit words to the inputs of the XOR gates. If X (X2X1X0) and Y(Y2Y1Y0) are two 3-bit words, X2 and Y2 will connect to one XOR gate, X1 and Y1 to the next XOR gate and X0 and Y0 to the last XOR gate. You could see the result of the operation on a LED connected to the output of the NOR gate. Other implementations are also possible of course. The solution above is absolutely correct, but includes a 3 input gate. If the task is to use only two input gates, then a small change will be needed. Take the outputs from any two XOR gates into a 2 input OR gate. Then take the output of the OR gate and the output of the third XOR gate into a 2 input NOR gate. The operation remains identical to the first solution but adheres to the brief of using gates with 2 inputs. In the real world, there is probably no reason to impose such a limitation on a design so the first solution would normally be the preferred route to take.
You can't make XOR out of NOT alone. Mathematically, NOT takes only a single argument, and its gate, an inverter, takes a single input. There's no way to combine two inputs giving a single output with one input gates. You need some two input gates to do the job. They can be AND, OR, NAND, NOR, or some combination, but you need something. That said, they don't have to be IC gates; you can combine two inputs with diodes to make an OR gate, so you could make XOR with only inverters and diodes, i.e. no other gate symbols on your schematic, but it would mot be making XOR out of NOT.
3*xor- two input
Seven gates, they are: not, and, or, nor, nand, xor, xnor.
A logic gate is used to implement any digital logic. It may be AND, OR, XOR, NOT, XNOR, NAND, NOR. These logic gates can be used to implement the output equations of digital circuits in order to design them.