T
Tobias Baumann
Guest
Hi everybody,
the question above has been come up between a colleague and me. Should
the toplevel module be created as schematic plan or written as text in VHDL?
I prefer the second one, my colleague the first. The only advantage I
see for using schematic coding, is that I have a visual overview of my
toplevel modul and I quickly can find which blocks are connected together.
On the other side, the development process is much slower because of
using the mouse instead of keyboard. I also think that using textfiles
are much easier to handle for revision controlling software like git or svn.
Maybe someone can give me a few impressions how you handle the toplevel
module. Before I started my new job, we worked at CERN on very large
designs with hundreds of moduls in a team with about 10 VHDL engineers.
We avoided to use graphical coding and this worked excellent, so I don't
see any reason, why to change this.
Thanks a lot,
Tobias
the question above has been come up between a colleague and me. Should
the toplevel module be created as schematic plan or written as text in VHDL?
I prefer the second one, my colleague the first. The only advantage I
see for using schematic coding, is that I have a visual overview of my
toplevel modul and I quickly can find which blocks are connected together.
On the other side, the development process is much slower because of
using the mouse instead of keyboard. I also think that using textfiles
are much easier to handle for revision controlling software like git or svn.
Maybe someone can give me a few impressions how you handle the toplevel
module. Before I started my new job, we worked at CERN on very large
designs with hundreds of moduls in a team with about 10 VHDL engineers.
We avoided to use graphical coding and this worked excellent, so I don't
see any reason, why to change this.
Thanks a lot,
Tobias