Controlled Buffer/Inverter
Library: |
Gates |
Introduced: |
2.0 Beta 1 |
Appearance: |
|
Behavior
The controlled buffer and inverter, often called three-state
buffers/inverters, each have a one-bit "control"
input pin on the south side. The value at this control pin affects how
the component behaves:
- When the value on this pin is 1,
then the component behaves just like the respective component (a buffer or a inverter (NOT
gate)).
- When the value is 0 or unknown (i.e., floating), then the
component's output is also floating.
- When the value is an error value (such as would occur when two
conflicting values are being fed into the input), then the output is an
error value.
Controlled buffers can be useful when you have a wire (often called a
bus) whose value should match the output of one of several
components. By placing a controlled buffer between each component
output and the bus, you can control whether that component's output is
fed onto the bus or not.
Pins
- West edge (input, bit width matches Bit Width attribute)
- The component input that will be used to compute the output if the
control input is 1.
- South edge (input, bit width 1)
- The component's control input.
- East edge (output, bit width matches Bit Width attribute)
- The component's output, which will be floating if the control input
is 0 or floating, the error value if the control input is the error
value, and will be computed based on the west-side input if the control
input is 1.
Attributes
- Bit Width
- The bit width of the component's inputs and outputs.
Poke Tool Behavior
None.
Text Tool Behavior
None.
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