Table of Contents

discrete Keyword 3

Karnaugh Mapping

Definition

Karnaugh Mapping is a method by which one can take a truth table, or an expression, and simplify it. The working example on wikipedia is VERY useful in understanding this - I would recommend drawing it all out on a whiteboard and going by step-by-step. That is how I was able to grasp an understanding of it. I'll attach a photo as well showing how I worked through the example.

References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karnaugh_map

discrete Keyword 3 Phase 2

kleene star

Definition

Definition (in your own words) of the chosen keyword.

References

List any sites, books, or sources utilized when researching information on this topic. (Remove any filler text).

discrete Keyword 3 Phase 2 Phase 2

Karnaugh Mapping

Definition

Karnaugh Mapping is a method by which one can take a truth table, or an expression, and simplify it. The working example on wikipedia is VERY useful in understanding this - I would recommend drawing it all out on a whiteboard and going by step-by-step. That is how I was able to grasp an understanding of it. I'll attach a photo as well showing how I worked through the example.

References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karnaugh_map

Demonstration

Demonstration of the indicated keyword.

If you wish to aid your definition with a code sample, you can do so by using a wiki code block, an example follows:

/*
 * Sample code block
 */
#include <stdio.h>
 
int main()
{
    return(0);
}

Alternatively (or additionally), if you want to demonstrate something on the command-line, you can do so as follows:

lab46:~$ cd src
lab46:~/src$ gcc -o hello hello.c
lab46:~/src$ ./hello
Hello, World!
lab46:~/src$ 

Demonstration

Demonstration of the indicated keyword.

If you wish to aid your definition with a code sample, you can do so by using a wiki code block, an example follows:

/*
 * Sample code block
 */
#include <stdio.h>
 
int main()
{
    return(0);
}

Alternatively (or additionally), if you want to demonstrate something on the command-line, you can do so as follows:

lab46:~$ cd src
lab46:~/src$ gcc -o hello hello.c
lab46:~/src$ ./hello
Hello, World!
lab46:~/src$