maestor
Full Member level 3
In Spain:
I know in Universities in Spain is more popular VHDL, it depends of the University of course but most of them teach VHDL.
In places like Madrid and Barcelona you can find companies using VHDL and companies using Verilog although 80% is VHDL.
I also know that in Scotland, in the Silicon Glen where I spent 3 years, there is more VHDL than Verilog but is very close, there are a lot of American companies (less these days unfortunately) there which use Verilog.
I am a VHDL guy, I have done some Verilog and what can I say I don't like it, it's too 'softy'! VHDL is easy to learn, describes hardware much better than Verilog (your bug-fix turn around should be shorter), it has things like records, configuration...which are great, specially records which give you a lot of flexibility in your code.
The only thing I've heard these days which benefits Verilog is simulation time, tools like Modelsim are X (?) times faster simulating Verilog than VHDL.
Regards,
Maestor
I know in Universities in Spain is more popular VHDL, it depends of the University of course but most of them teach VHDL.
In places like Madrid and Barcelona you can find companies using VHDL and companies using Verilog although 80% is VHDL.
I also know that in Scotland, in the Silicon Glen where I spent 3 years, there is more VHDL than Verilog but is very close, there are a lot of American companies (less these days unfortunately) there which use Verilog.
I am a VHDL guy, I have done some Verilog and what can I say I don't like it, it's too 'softy'! VHDL is easy to learn, describes hardware much better than Verilog (your bug-fix turn around should be shorter), it has things like records, configuration...which are great, specially records which give you a lot of flexibility in your code.
The only thing I've heard these days which benefits Verilog is simulation time, tools like Modelsim are X (?) times faster simulating Verilog than VHDL.
Regards,
Maestor