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  2. Half subtractor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subtractor

    The half subtractors can be designed through the combinational Boolean logic circuits [2] as shown in Figure 1 and 2.The half subtractor is a combinational circuit which is used to perform subtraction of two bits. It has two inputs, the minuend and subtrahend and two outputs the difference and borrow out . The borrow out signal is set when the ...

  3. Adder (electronics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adder_(electronics)

    Full adder. A full adder adds binary numbers and accounts for values carried in as well as out. A one-bit full-adder adds three one-bit numbers, often written as , , and ; and are the operands, and is a bit carried in from the previous less-significant stage. 3 The circuit produces a two-bit output. Output carry and sum are typically ...

  4. Adder–subtractor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adder–subtractor

    A 4-bit ripple-carry adder–subtractor based on a 4-bit adder that performs two's complement on A when D = 1 to yield S = B − A. Having an n-bit adder for A and B, then S = A + B. Then, assume the numbers are in two's complement. Then to perform B − A, two's complement theory says to invert each bit of A with a NOT gate then add one.

  5. Carry-lookahead adder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carry-lookahead_adder

    A carry-lookahead adder (CLA) or fast adder is a type of electronics adder used in digital logic. A carry-lookahead adder improves speed by reducing the amount of time required to determine carry bits. It can be contrasted with the simpler, but usually slower, ripple-carry adder (RCA), for which the carry bit is calculated alongside the sum bit ...

  6. Kogge–Stone adder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kogge–Stone_adder

    An example of a 4-bit Kogge–Stone adder is shown in the diagram. Each vertical stage produces a "propagate" and a "generate" bit, as shown. The culminating generate bits (the carries) are produced in the last stage (vertically), and these bits are XOR'd with the initial propagate after the input (the red boxes) to produce the sum bits. E.g., the first (least-significant) sum bit is ...

  7. Carry-save adder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carry-save_adder

    A carry-save adder[1][2][nb 1] is a type of digital adder, used to efficiently compute the sum of three or more binary numbers. It differs from other digital adders in that it outputs two (or more) numbers, and the answer of the original summation can be achieved by adding these outputs together. A carry save adder is typically used in a binary ...

  8. Carry-select adder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carry-select_adder

    In the conditional sum adder, the MUX level chooses between two n/2-bit inputs that are themselves built as conditional-sum adder. The bottom level of the tree consists of pairs of 2-bit adders (1 half adder and 3 full adders) plus 2 single-bit multiplexers. The conditional sum adder suffers from a very large fan-out of the intermediate carry ...

  9. Brent–Kung adder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brent–Kung_adder

    The Brent–Kung adder is a parallel prefix adder (PPA) form of carry-lookahead adder (CLA). Proposed by Richard Peirce Brent and Hsiang Te Kung in 1982 it introduced higher regularity to the adder structure and has less wiring congestion leading to better performance and less necessary chip area to implement compared to the Kogge–Stone adder ...