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Design Ideas: February 1, 1996

Circuit counts logic ones on signal lines

Robert Inkol
Defense Research Establishment
Ottawa, ON, Canada


In some cases, you may need to monitor the number of logic ones present on a set of signal lines. In the classic method to provide this monitoring function, the parallel-counter circuit that Reference 1 describes counts the number of ones on a set of N-1 signal lines, where N is a power of two.

thumbnailHowever, you can use Figure 1's much simpler circuit, which does not require full adders, if you need to detect only three conditions: no ones, one one, and two or more ones.

thumbnailNote: The condition in which ones are present on all but one of the signal lines corresponds to the second condition for complemented input signals. The circuit in Figure 1 is a 2-D array of two simple logic cells organized in a binary tree. A C cell ( Figure 2a) processes each pair of input signals. A D cell ( Figure 2b) processes the four output signals from each pair of C cells. The circuit decodes the two output signals from the last D cell in the tree (D7 in Figure 1) to indicate the condition describing the status of the input signals applied to the array.

Thus, an array of N/2 C cells and N/2-1 D cells can monitor N input signals. You can accommodate values of N other than powers of two by using two or more arrays and combining each pair into a single array with a single D cell. This circuit is economical to implement in an ASIC. The worst-case delay of approximately 2log2N gate delays is comparable with the delays of other decoding schemes. Using typical CMOS gate-array macrocells, the logic for processing 32 input signals has a complexity equivalent to that of a circuit using fewer than 100 two-input NAND gates. (DI #1820) Reference

1. Schwartzlander, E, "Parallel Counters,"IEEE Transactions on Computers, V C-22, No. 11, November 1973.



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