Hello dears,
I was reading an e-book about digital design with VHDL and stopped for many days,
and now i'd like to continue reading. But i discovered that, nothing from what i had read is in my mind!
i lost every single word i had read before! annoying doesn't it?
Do i have to read it again from the beginnin'?
i'm asking you now to tell me how can one get the maximum benefit from reading such a book?
Thanks in advance!
It is important to read slowly, think about it, and make sure you understand it. Words are easily forgotten but if you understand a thing, that understanding will last longer.But i discovered that, nothing from what i had read is in my mind!
i lost every single word i had read before!
I don't think so. Many people don't know how to study effectively. A few years ago I was surprised when a friend of mine (age 40+) enrolled at a local university and one of the compulsory courses in the first year was a module about how to study.Is this a joke thread?
Is this a joke thread?
Do you find my thread under joking section?
Do we even have joking section here?
Retention also requires avoiding the funny weeds that can erase ROMs in a flash. ( ho ho ho)
@@mrflibble
Well, i may need to do exercise to remember section i've just learned, but i don't have an FPGA and even i don't know
how one could download his VHDL to this board. I'm reading at home trying to gain experience in this field but the disappointing this is that,
the most important thing i can do is to follow the examples in the book and test it on Quartus,checking the waveform.
I need to know how far i can go with my VHDL code! for example, if i wrote an example of a game using VHDL how can i play it?
Truly, i feel like anything i typed is not important because it's just a code, disappointing!
If i write a code for a certain circuit, i may need to see it in real life! i mean in hardware
to feel that i've made something. Do you understand me?
I read that some smart dogs do that.."Indeed, smarter or more hedonistic dogs than Wally have learned that by licking the toad they can get a very nice high. "That is a very real phenomenon. That is not a bad thing, that would give a dog a slightly more exciting life than what it normally has." but that was new info to me which will likely have a half life of one beer.
@mrflibble
Does the great thing i can do with VHDL is watching LEDs flashes on a dev board?
Please don't say yes!? :'(
And i was thinking that i can create great designs and somehow (i don't know the method ) these great designs can be translated to hardware
and i can take this hardware and putting it in any system and press a button to see it doing the job that's supposed to do?
I'm Depressed now!
I feel, writing VHDL codes without having the equivalent hardware is like you're very hungry, you decided to make a dinner, you make all the instructions to get a good taste
but finally you discovered that, you don't know how to cook!! So you feel like your work was useless ... And you still HUNGRY!
I believe it's not fair and thus, i can't study this way!
Any idea?
What do you mean by ready-built boards?You might want to check out 'minimig'. I've not tried it yet, but it looks an interesting dev board ; )
Some company is selling ready-built boards.
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