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CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet

CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

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Page 1: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet

Page 2: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

It’s Not Magic

The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works.

We will discuss the logic used to create computer instructions and how the computer decides which instructions to execute.

Although at times it may appear to be magical. It’s just math and science.

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Page 3: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Our Picture of a Computer

Data Bus

memory input/ output

controlunit

arithmetic-logic unit

Central ProcessingUnit (CPU)

registers

Page 4: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

The Reliability of Binary Representation

Electronic devices are most reliable in a bistable environment

Bistable environment Distinguishing only two electronic states

Current flowing or not

Direction of flow

Computers are bistable: hence binary representations

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Page 5: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

A Switch is a 2-state device that can be toggledA relay is a switch built with an

electromagnet

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controlled current

controlling current

when the controlling current is 1, the electromagnet pullsthe switch closed, and the controlled current flows through

the switch

Page 6: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Switches can do it all

With switches we can implement AND, OR, and NOT gates

With just those types of gates, we can design circuits to perform any computation

Remember, computers do very simple tasks, very quickly

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Page 7: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Basic electric circuits:

Computing AND

CS 302 - Computer Fluency 7

in1 in2 out 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 1

truth table for AND}

when both inputs are 1,the circuit is closed

andin1in2 out

= in1 in2

outpowersource

in1 in2

Page 8: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Basic electric circuits:

Computing OR

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in1 in2 out 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1

truth table for OR}in1

in2 outor

= in1 + in2

out

in1

in2

when either input is 1,the circuit is closed

Page 9: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Basic electric circuits:

Computing NOT

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in1 out 0 1 1 0

truth table for NOT}

A new type of switch

which is closedat rest

in1 out

= in1’

not

out

in1

Page 10: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

A better switch: Transistors

bi-stable, solid state device switching is done electronically, not

mechanically no moving parts; therefore, fast, small,

reliable can switch states in about one 10 billionth of a

second about 5 million transistors can fit on a chip 1

centimeter square. Density is increasing rapidly with new technology.

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Page 11: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Figure 4.11

Simplified Model of a Transistor

CS 302 - Computer Fluency 11

Page 12: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Boolean Logic and Gates: Boolean Logic

Boolean logic describes operations on true/false values

True/false maps easily onto bistable environment

Boolean logic operations on electronic signals may be built out of transistors and other electronic devices

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Page 13: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Boolean Logic (continued) Boolean expressions

Constructed by combining together Boolean operations

Example: (a AND b) OR ((NOT b) AND (NOT a))

Truth tables capture the output/value of a Boolean expression

A column for each input plus the output

A row for each combination of input values

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Page 14: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Boolean Logic (continued) Example:

(a AND b) OR ((NOT b) and (NOT a))

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a b Value

0 0 1

0 1 0

1 0 0

1 1 1

Page 15: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Building Computer Circuits: Introduction

A circuit is a collection of logic gates:

Transforms a set of binary inputs into a set of binary outputs

Values of the outputs depend only on the current values of the inputs

Combinational circuits have no cycles in them (no outputs feed back into their own inputs)

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Page 16: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

A Compare-for-equality Circuit Compare-for-equality circuit

CE compares two unsigned binary integers for equality

Built by combining together 1-bit comparison circuits (1-CE)

Integers are equal if corresponding bits are equal (AND together 1-CD circuits for each pair of bits)

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Page 17: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

A Compare-for-equality Circuit (continued)

1-CE circuit truth table

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a b Output

0 0 1

0 1 0

1 0 0

1 1 1

Page 18: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Figure 4.22

One-Bit Compare for Equality Circuit

CS 302 - Computer Fluency 18

Page 19: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

A Compare-for-equality Circuit (continued)

1-CE Boolean expression

First case: (NOT a) AND (NOT b)

Second case: a AND b

Combined:

((NOT a) AND (NOT b)) OR (a AND b)

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Page 20: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Examples Of Circuit Design And Construction

Compare-for-equality circuit

Addition circuit

Both circuits can be built using the sum-of-products algorithm

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Page 21: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

An Addition Circuit

Addition circuit

Adds two unsigned binary integers, setting output bits and an overflow

Built from 1-bit adders (1-ADD)

Starting with rightmost bits, each pair produces

A value for that order

A carry bit for next place to the left

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Page 22: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

An Addition Circuit (continued) 1-ADD truth table

Input

One bit from each input integer

One carry bit (always zero for rightmost bit)

Output

One bit for output place value

One “carry” bit

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Page 23: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Figure 4.24

The 1-ADD Circuit and Truth Table

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Page 24: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

An Addition Circuit (continued) Building the full adder

Put rightmost bits into 1-ADD, with zero for the input carry

Send 1-ADD’s output value to output, and put its carry value as input to 1-ADD for next bits to left

Repeat process for all bits

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Page 25: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Computer Instructions

The logic for every instruction is executed on every cycle by the Arithmetic and Logic Unit (ALU).

The answer used is the one for the instruction that is currently decoded and executed by the CPU.

This selection is done by the Control Circuits.

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Page 26: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Control Circuits

Do not perform computations Choose order of operations or select among

data values described by the instruction The pattern of ones and zeros in each

instruction will determine the which result is used from the ALU

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Page 27: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Control Circuits (cont.)

Major types of controls circuits Multiplexors

Select one of inputs to send to output

Decoders Sends a 1 on one output line, based on

what input line indicates

CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet 27

Page 28: CS 1308 – Computer Literacy and the Internet. It’s Not Magic  The goal of the next series of lectures is to show you exactly how a computer works

Summary

Binary values create a bistable environment, making computers reliable

Boolean logic maps easily onto electronic hardware

Circuits are constructed using Boolean expressions as an abstraction

Computational and control circuits may be built from Boolean gates

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