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buts101
Joined: 29 Apr 2005 Posts: 189
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07 Jan 2006 13:59 dxp 2004 tutorial |
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features of protel dxp 2004?
I know, protel dxp 2004 can do simple circuit simulation(if simulative
models are used),it also helps in pcb layouting. But i' like to know
about its FPGA features. such as
1. "what are nanoboards","how much they cost","does any other device
(FPGA) works with the software other than nanoboard?
2. why "device view==>hardware and software devices" features always
inactive?
3. Does it needs support of altera qu(at)rtus or xilinx ise software to
burn codes to fpga devices of those company?
4. Is there any way to virtual simulation(like led chaser,lcd and
keypad scan) the vhdl code written fpga device and then compile and
write the working vhdl code at last to the FPGA?
5. Is there any tutorial on protel dxp 2004 on web other at help files
which comes with the software?
thank you
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samcheetah
Joined: 25 May 2004 Posts: 672 Helped: 31 Location: Pakistan
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07 Jan 2006 17:38 fpga to dxp |
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nanoboard is basically a product of altium and the basic idea is that it is a nano-level breadboard. just as you use breadboards for prototyping, the nanoboard allows you to prototype nano-level circuits. it comes loaded with alot of goodies and there are a number of plug-in modules available for it which gives you the freedom to target a big range of FPGAs (spartan 3 or virtex 4 etc). and if im not forgetting, the nanoboard costs around $12000.
the devices view shows the nanoboards that have been connected to your PC. if you dont have any nanoboard, then there will be nothing to show in the devices view.
yes, altium dxp doesnt have the place-and-route (PAR) tools in the package. and therefore to program the FPGA (on a nanoboard) you will have to first install xilinx or altera software as you have mentioned.
you can simulate your vhdl code using simulators like modelsim from within altium dxp.
the altium dxp has a huge documentation. there are lots and lots of tutorials and examples.
i hope that helps
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House_Cat
Joined: 21 Feb 2002 Posts: 1507 Helped: 307 Location: USA
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07 Jan 2006 18:55 lcd in protel dxp 2004 |
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| samcheetah wrote: |
and if im not forgetting, the nanoboard costs around $12000.
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No - the nanoboard isn't THAT expensive. It costs about $1K (USD). The only way it would cost $12K is if you bought it and the full AD6 EDA software together.
If you want to see what it looks like, there is a picture and description at the following URL. You can even download the manual from that page. http://www.altium.com/Products/NanoBoardNB1/MoreontheNanoBoard/
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samcheetah
Joined: 25 May 2004 Posts: 672 Helped: 31 Location: Pakistan
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08 Jan 2006 6:20 Re: features of protel dxp 2004? |
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| oh okay im sorry i didnt know that. actually i talked to my local altium dealer when i was planning to buy the altium live design evaluation kit and i just remember he said $12000. it might have been for both the nanoboard and Altium DXP 2004.
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