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MyHDL [1] is a Python-based hardware description language (HDL).. Features of MyHDL include: The ability to generate VHDL and Verilog code from a MyHDL design. [2]The ability to generate a testbench (Conversion of test benches [3]) with test vectors in VHDL or Verilog, based on complex computations in Python.
Generally, however, software programming languages do not include any capability for explicitly expressing time, and thus cannot function as hardware description languages. Before the introduction of System Verilog in 2002, C++ integration with a logic simulator was one of the few ways to use object-oriented programming in hardware verification.
The original Verilog simulator, Gateway Design's Verilog-XL was the first (and only, for a time) Verilog simulator to be qualified for ASIC (validation) sign-off. After its acquisition by Cadence Design Systems, Verilog-XL changed very little over the years, retaining an interpreted language engine, and freezing language-support at Verilog-1995.
Verilog was later submitted to IEEE and became IEEE Standard 1364-1995, commonly referred to as Verilog-95. In the same time frame Cadence initiated the creation of Verilog-A to put standards support behind its analog simulator Spectre. Verilog-A was never intended to be a standalone language and is a subset of Verilog-AMS which encompassed ...
SA-C programming language; Cascade (C to RTL synthesizer) from CriticalBlue; Mitrion-C from Mitrionics; SPARK (a C-to-VHDL) from University of California, San Diego [4] VLSI/VHDL CAD Group Index of Useful Tools from Case Western Reserve University [5] MyHDL is a Python-subset compiler and simulator to VHDL and Verilog [6]
The Verilog Procedural Interface is part of the IEEE 1364 Programming Language Interface standard; the most recent edition of the standard is from 2005. VPI is sometimes also referred to as PLI 2, since it replaces the deprecated Program Language Interface (PLI). While PLI 1 was deprecated in favor of VPI (aka.
Value change dump (VCD) (also known less commonly as "variable change dump") is an ASCII-based format for dumpfiles generated by EDA logic simulation tools. The standard, four-value VCD format was defined along with the Verilog hardware description language by the IEEE Standard 1364-1995 in 1996.
In computer programming languages, an identifier is a lexical token (also called a symbol, but not to be confused with the symbol primitive data type) that names the language's entities. Some of the kinds of entities an identifier might denote include variables , data types , labels , subroutines , and modules .