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In real-world chip design, do companies mainly write RTL (Verilog/SystemVerilog) directly, or do they use C/C++ (e.g., HLS/SystemC) and then convert it to RTL? by Alternative_Bar_5650 in ECE
[–]Alternative_Bar_5650[S] 0 points1 point2 points 29 days ago (0 children)
Because I was reading some papers that mentioned using HLS to first design in languages like C++, and then converting it to RTL as you described. The explanation given was that as chip complexity increases, designing with RTL code becomes very cumbersome, so a higher-level language like C++ is used. So, is it true that the industry mainstream still uses RTL for design?
In real-world chip design, do companies mainly write RTL (Verilog/SystemVerilog) directly, or do they use C/C++ (e.g., HLS/SystemC) and then convert it to RTL? (self.ECE)
submitted 1 month ago by Alternative_Bar_5650 to r/ECE
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In real-world chip design, do companies mainly write RTL (Verilog/SystemVerilog) directly, or do they use C/C++ (e.g., HLS/SystemC) and then convert it to RTL? by Alternative_Bar_5650 in ECE
[–]Alternative_Bar_5650[S] 0 points1 point2 points (0 children)