In digital logic, a don't-care term[1][2] (abbreviated DC, historically also known as redundancies,[2]irrelevancies,[2]optional entries,[3][4]invalid combinations,[5][4][6]vacuous combinations,[7][4]forbidden combinations,[8][2]unused states or logical remainders[9]) for a function is an input-sequence (a series of bits) for which the function output does not matter. An input that is known never to occur is a can't-happen term.[10][11][12][13] Both these types of conditions are treated the same way in logic design and may be referred to collectively as don't-care conditions for brevity.[14] The designer of a logic circuit to implement the function need not care about such inputs, but can choose the circuit's output arbitrarily, usually such that the simplest, smallest, fastest or cheapest circuit results (minimization) or the power-consumption is minimized.[15][16]
Don't-care terms are important to consider in minimizing logic circuit design, including graphical methods like Karnaugh–Veitch maps and algebraic methods such as the Quine–McCluskey algorithm. In 1958, Seymour Ginsburg proved that minimization of states of a finite-state machine with don't-care conditions does not necessarily yield a minimization of logic elements. Direct minimization of logic elements in such circuits was computationally impractical (for large systems) with the computing power available to Ginsburg in 1958.[17]
Examples of don't-care terms are the binary values 1010 through 1111 (10 through 15 in decimal) for a function that takes a binary-coded decimal (BCD) value, because a BCD value never takes on such values (so called pseudo-tetrades); in the pictures, the circuit computing the lower left bar of a 7-segment display can be minimized to ab + ac by an appropriate choice of circuit outputs for dcba = 1010…1111.
Write-only registers, as frequently found in older hardware, are often a consequence of don't-care optimizations in the trade-off between functionality and the number of necessary logic gates.[18]
"Don't care" may also refer to an unknown value in a multi-valued logic system, in which case it may also be called an X value or don't know.[19] In the Veriloghardware description language such values are denoted by the letter "X". In the VHDL hardware description language such values are denoted (in the standard logic package) by the letter "X" (forced unknown) or the letter "W" (weak unknown).[20]
An X value does not exist in hardware. In simulation, an X value can result from two or more sources driving a signal simultaneously, or the stable output of a flip-flop not having been reached. In synthesized hardware, however, the actual value of such a signal will be either 0 or 1, but will not be determinable from the circuit's inputs.[20]
Power-up states
Further considerations are needed for logic circuits that involve some feedback. That is, those circuits that depend on the previous output(s) of the circuit as well as its current external inputs. Such circuits can be represented by a state machine. It is sometimes possible that some states that are nominally can't-happen conditions can accidentally be generated during power-up of the circuit or else by random interference (like cosmic radiation, electrical noise or heat). This is also called forbidden input.[21] In some cases, there is no combination of inputs that can exit the state machine into a normal operational state. The machine remains stuck in the power-up state or can be moved only between other can't-happen states in a walled garden of states. This is also called a hardware lockup or soft error. Such states, while nominally can't-happen, are not don't-care, and designers take steps either to ensure that they are really made can't-happen, or else if they do happen, that they create a don't-care alarm indicating an emergency state[21] for error detection, or they are transitory and lead to a normal operational state.[22][23][24]
^ abcdPhister, Jr., Montgomery (April 1959) [December 1958]. Logical design of digital computers. Digital Design and Applications (3rd printing, 1st ed.). New York, USA: John Wiley & Sons Inc. p. 97. ISBN0-47168805-3. LCCN58-6082. MR0093930. ISBN978-0-47168805-1. p. 97: […] These prohibited combinations will here be called redundancies (they have also been called irrelevancies, "don't cares," and forbidden combinations), and they can usually be used to simplify Boolean functions. […] (xvi+408 pages)
^ abcMoore, Edward Forrest (December 1958). "Samuel H. Caldwell. Switching circuits and logical design. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York 1958, and Chapman & Hall Limited, London 1958, xvii + 686 pp". The Journal of Symbolic Logic (Review). 23 (4): 433–434. doi:10.2307/2964020. JSTOR2964020. S2CID57495605. p. 433: […] what Caldwell calls "optional entries" […] other authors have called "invalid combinations", "don't cares", "vacuous combinations" […] (2 pages)
^Marcus, Mitchell Paul[at Wikidata] (c. 1970). "Chapter 6. Tabular method of simplification: Optional combinations". Written at IBM, Endicott / Binghampton, New York, USA. Switching circuits for engineers. Habana, Cuba: Edicion Revolucionaria, Instituto del Libro. pp. 70–72 [71]. 19 No. 1002. (xiv+2+296+2 pages)
^Aiken, Howard H.; Blaauw, Gerrit; Burkhart, William; Burns, Robert J.; Cali, Lloyd; Canepa, Michele; Ciampa, Carmela M.; Coolidge, Jr., Charles A.; Fucarile, Joseph R.; Gadd, Jr., J. Orten; Gucker, Frank F.; Harr, John A.; Hawkins, Robert L.; Hayes, Miles V.; Hofheimer, Richard; Hulme, William F.; Jennings, Betty L.; Johnson, Stanley A.; Kalin, Theodore; Kincaid, Marshall; Lucchini, E. Edward; Minty, William; Moore, Benjamin L.; Remmes, Joseph; Rinn, Robert J.; Roche, John W.; Sanbord, Jacquelin; Semon, Warren L.; Singer, Theodore; Smith, Dexter; Smith, Leonard; Strong, Peter F.; Thomas, Helene V.; Wang, An; Whitehouse, Martha L.; Wilkins, Holly B.; Wilkins, Robert E.; Woo, Way Dong; Little, Elbert P.; McDowell, M. Scudder (1952) [January 1951]. Synthesis of electronic computing and control circuits. The Annals of the Computation Laboratory of Harvard University. Vol. XXVII (second printing, revised ed.). Write-Patterson Air Force Base: Harvard University Press (Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA) / Geoffrey Cumberlege Oxford University Press (London). ark:/13960/t4zh1t09d. Retrieved 2017-04-16. (2+x+278+2 pages) (NB. Work commenced in April 1948.)
^Rushdi, Ali Muhammad Ali; Badawi, Raid Mohammad Salih (January 2017). "Karnaugh-Map Utilization in Boolean Analysis: The Case of War Termination". Journal of Engineering and Computer Sciences. Qualitative Comparative Analysis. 10 (1). Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabi / Qassim University: 53–88 [54–55, 57, 61–63]. Rabi'II 1438H. Archived from the original on 2021-02-16. Retrieved 2021-02-17. [13]
^Association Internationale pour le Calcul Analogique (AICA), ed. (1970) [1969-09-15]. "unknown". Colloque international / International Symposium. Systèmes logiques: Conception et applications / Design and Applications of Logical Systems. Actes / Proceedings. Bruxelles, 15–20 septembre 1969 / Brussels, September 15–20, 1969. (in English and French). Part 2. Bruxelles, Belgium: Presses Académiques Européennes: 1253. Retrieved 2021-03-28. {{cite journal}}: Cite uses generic title (help) (xxxiii+650+676 pages)
^Katz, Randy Howard (1994) [May 1993]. "Chapter 2.2.4 Incompletely Specified Functions". Written at Berkeley, California, USA. Contemporary Logic Design (1 ed.). Redwood City, California, USA: The Benjamin/Cummings Publishing Company, Inc. p. 64. ISBN0-8053-2703-7. 32703-7. p. 64: […] The output functions have the value "X" for each of the input combinations we should never encounter. When used in a truth tables, the value X is often called a don't care. Do not confuse this with the value X reported by many logic simulators, where it represents an undefined value or a don't know. Any actual implementation of the circuit will generate some output for the don't care cases. […] (2+xxviii+699+10+2 pages)
"Chapter 6. Microcomputer System Component Data Sheet - EPROMs and ROM: I. PROM and ROM Programming Instructions - B3. Non-Intellec Hex Paper Tape Format, C1. Intellec Hex Computer Punched Card Format, C2. PN Computer Punched Card Format". MCS-80 User's Manual (With Introduction to MCS-85). Intel Corporation. October 1977 [1975]. pp. 6–77, 6–79. 98-153D. Retrieved 2020-02-27. [17][18] (NB. Uses the term "don't care" data for address ranges in programmable memory chips which do not need to contain a particular value und thus can remain undefined in the programming instructions.)
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