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111DATA
STORAGE
2
Computers represent information as patterns of bits
A bit (Binary Digit) is one of the two digits 0 or 1
Storing a bit in the machine requires a device that can be in one of two states:On or Off , True or False , 0 or 1
Storage of Bits
3
GATES AND FLIP-FLOPS
There are several gates that perform logical operations
The basic gates are: AND OR EXLUSIVE-OR(X-OR) NOT
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AND Gate
Truth Table
A B Y
0 0 0
0 1 0
1 0 0
1 1 1
Logic Equation
Y= A.B
Logic Circuit
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OR Gate
Truth Table
A B Y
0 0 0
0 1 1
1 0 1
1 1 1
Logic Equation:
Y = A + B
Logic Circuit
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Exclusive OR (X-OR)
Truth Table
A B Y
0 0 0
0 1 1
1 0 1
1 1 0
Logic Equation
Y = A + B
Logic Circuit
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NOT Gate
Truth Table
A Y
0 1
1 0
Logic Equation
Y= A
Logic Circuit
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NAND Gate
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NOR Gate
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Example(1) Draw the logic circuit and find the truth table for the following logic equation:
X=(A+B)C
A B C X
0 0 0 0
0
0
0
0 0
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Example(1) Draw the logic circuit and find the truth table for the following logic equation:
X=(A+B)C
A B C X
0 0 0 0
0 0 1 0
0
0
1
0 0
12
Example(1) Draw the logic circuit and find the truth table for the following logic equation:
X=(A+B)C
A B C X
0 0 0 0
0 0 1 0
0 1 0 0
0
1
0
1 0
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Example(1) Draw the logic circuit and find the truth table for the following logic equation:
X=(A+B)C
A B C X
0 0 0 0
0 0 1 0
0 1 0 0
0 1 1 1
1 0 0 0
1 0 1 1
1 1 0 0
1 1 1 1
1
1
1
1 1
No. of States = 2No. Of Inputs
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FLIP - FLOP A flip-flop is a circuit that has one of two
output values; its output remains fixed until a temporary pulse from another circuit causes it to shift to other value
The significance of a flip-flop is that it stores the information
There are several kinds of flip flops like: J-K flip-flop , S-R flip-flop, D flip-flop ,
T flip-flop
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Numbering Systems Decimal System Binary System Octal System Hexadecimal
System
Decimal System Consists of 10 digits
0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9 The base for this system is 10 To analyze any decimal
number:
652= 102x6 + 101x5 + 100x2
= 600 + 50 + 2 = 652
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Binary System
Consists of two digits 0 and 1 The base for the binary system is 2 It is the system used to represent
information inside the computer system It is important to be familiar with
conversion methods between the different numbering systems
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Binary System
Decimal -to- Binary conversion:
To convert (8)10from decimal to binary:
2 8
(8)10=(1000)2 2 4 0 LSB
2 2 0
2 1 0
2 0 1 MSB
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Binary System
Binary -to- Decimal Conversion:
Convert (1011)2 into decimal number:
23x1 + 22x0 + 21x1 + 20x1=
8 + 0 + 2 + 1 = (13)10
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Octal System
Consists of 8 digits:
0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7 The base for the octal system is 8 It has many applications in information
coding systems
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Octal System Decimal -to- Octal Conversion:
To convert (13)10 into Octal number:
(13)10=(15)8 8 13
8 1 5
0 1 Octal -to- Decimal Conversion:
(15)8=
81x1 + 80x5= 8 + 5 = (13)10
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Hexadecimal System
It consists of 16 digits:
0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,A,B,C,D,E,F The base for hexadecimal system is 16 It is commonly used to describe all the
information in the computer system(the information represented as binary numbers and described by hexadecimal system)
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Hexadecimal System
Decimal -to- Hexadecimal Conversion:
Convert(302)10 into Hexadecimal notation:
16 302
(302)10=(12E)16 16 18 14
16 1 2
16 0 1
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Hexadecimal System
Hexadecimal -to- Decimal Conversion:
(A4B)16=
162x10 + 161x4 + 160x11=
2560 + 64 + 11 =(2575)10
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Hexadecimal System
Hexadecimal -to- Binary:
(140B)= (0001 0100 0000 1011)2
Binary -to- Hexadecimal:
(10001001011111)2=( ? )16
2 2 5 F
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Fractions Decimal -to-Binary: Result Carry
(3.5)10=11.? 0.5x2=1.0 0.0 1
=11.1 1x2-1
(0.6)10= 0.6x2= 0.2 1
=(0.10011)2 0.2x2= 0.4 0
0.4x2= 0.8 0
1x2-1+1x2-4+1x2-5= 0.8x2= 0.6 1
0.5+0.0625+0.3125= 0.6x2= 0.2 1
0.59375 Round-off Problem
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Storing Integers:1. Excess Notation: It is easy to distinguish the patterns
that represent negative values from those do not.
Those that represent negative values have a 0 as their most significant bit, while those do not represent negative values have a 1 as their MSB.
The MSB is often called Sign Bit
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1)Excess Notation:The following is 3-bit , excess-4 notation:
Bit Pattern Value represented
111 + 3
110 + 2
101 + 1
100 0
011 - 1
010 - 2
001 - 3
000 - 4
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2) Two’s Complement Notation
A notation used to represent both positive and negative integers
It simplifies the arithmetic operations, such as Addition and Subtraction , and then Multiplication and Division
By using this notation, the subtraction operation can be done in similar way the addition performed
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Two’s Complement: To obtain two’s complement of a decimal number, for
example ( 5 ): Get the binary value 101, and to represent that this is
a positive number, put a leading 0 as MSB 0101 Get the 1’s complement of the above value by
inverting each digit: 0101
1010 Add 1 to the result to get + 1
-------------
2’s Complement 1011
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Two’s Complement:Example 0011 1100 1101
Perform 5 - 3.
Sol. Can be performed as 5 + (-3) using 2’s complement notation:
0101
1101 2’s complement of 3
------- +
1 0010 The result(+2)
Dropped
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3) Floating- Point Notation: A notation used to represent very large
or very small positive and negative numbers
Consists of byte. The MSB represents sign bit. 0 for positive and 1 for negative
The other bits divided as:
8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Sign Exponent Mantissa
Bit
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Floating-Point Notation: To convert 3 1/2 into F.P notation:
1) The number is +ve, the sign bit is 0
2) (3 1/2)10 is (11.1)2 , to represent it in F.P the radix should be shift left two places,
the value becomes .111(which is the mantissa) and the exponent is 2
3) Convert the exponent into excess-4 form by adding 4 to it (which results 6) and convert it into binary 110 (which is the exponent part)
4) The resulting F.P number is(01101110)
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Floating-Point Notation: Convert (10110101) from F.P notation
into decimal number:
1) Sign bit 1 , the No. is negative
2)The exponent is 011 which is 3 ,subtract 4 from it results (-1). This means the radix should be shift left one place.
3)The mantissa is .0101 the radix shifted one place left, the resulted value is (00101) which is 1/8 + 1/32 = 5/32
4)The resulted decimal value is - (5/32)
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Memory System
For purpose of storing data, a computer contains a large collection of circuits, each capable of storing a bit.
The computer system contains two main types of memory:
Main Memory Secondary Memory(Mass Storage)
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Main Memory: The storage circuits in a machine’s
main memory are arranged in manageable units called cells(or words) , with a typical cell size being 8 bits
Every 8 bits are called byte Every 1024 bytes called kilobyte(210
KB), and each 1024 KB is Megabyte … The main memory is divided to: Random Access Memory(RAM) Read Only Memory(ROM)
38
Mass Storage:
Secondary storage is a cheap and very large (huge amount) storage area
It is a permanent storage Classified into: Tapes Disks Compact Disks (CDs)
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Communication Errors:During the data transmission between
two points, we may lose data. To resolve such a problem, a variety of error detection and error correction techniques have been developed such as:
Parity Bit Cyclic Redundancy Check(CRC) Hamming Distance
40
Parity Bit:
It is a bit added as MSB used to detect errors without correcting them.
Is based on the principle that if each bit pattern being manipulated has an odd number of 1’s (Odd Parity)and a pattern found with an even number of 1’s (Even Parity)
This is achieved by adding an extra bit for parity check. Thus an ASCII of 8 bits becomes 9 bits
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Parity Bit: To obtain the odd parity for character(A):
1) From ASCII table,the hex code of A is 41, in binary is : 0100 0001
2) Since the number of 1’s in the code is even. The odd parity bit must be 1 to get odd number of 1’s, and the complete code becomes: 1 0100 0001
3)If an error happened in 3rd bit from right ,the received character becomes:
1 0100 0101 , the number of 1’s is even, so the receiver detect that an error has been occurred
42
Parity Bit:
4) This method is used to detect single error and never correct it
5) It fails to detect the error if it happens in the parity bit itself