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Difference between revisions of "don't care"
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− | '''Don't care''' is a [[digital signal]] [[state]] designation represented by '''X''' that indicates the actual signal value | + | {{title|Don't Care}}{{confuse|can't happen}} |
+ | '''Don't care''' or '''don't care condition''' is a [[digital signal]] [[state]] designation often represented by '''X''' that indicates the actual signal value or values have no impact on the outcome a circuit. Don't care values can be inputs that do not affect the output of a circuit or outputs that do not matter for a specific combination of inputs. Unlike [[can't happen]] conditions, don't care terms are still valid inputs however they do not influence the output value. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == don't care input == | ||
+ | {{empty section}} | ||
+ | == don't care output== | ||
+ | {{empty section}} | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
+ | * [[incompletely specified function]] | ||
* [[HIGH]] | * [[HIGH]] | ||
* [[LOW]] | * [[LOW]] |
Latest revision as of 00:57, 17 December 2017
- Not to be confused with can't happen.
Don't care or don't care condition is a digital signal state designation often represented by X that indicates the actual signal value or values have no impact on the outcome a circuit. Don't care values can be inputs that do not affect the output of a circuit or outputs that do not matter for a specific combination of inputs. Unlike can't happen conditions, don't care terms are still valid inputs however they do not influence the output value.
don't care input[edit]
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don't care output[edit]
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See also[edit]
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