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Comment by 🚀 Remy

Re: "A 6502 on a $20 Tang Nano 9K"

In: s/FPGA

It is simpler to write python than verilog for people who like python. It is possible to have a design with both verilog and python. The entire design doesn't have to be written in python

🚀 Remy

Aug 01 · 4 weeks ago

1 Later Comment

🚀 stack [OP/mod] · Aug 01 at 20:50:

I know people do this, but aside from my objections to Python as an abomination of a language in general, and its lack of stability when some library 10 layers down gets updated...

Verilog is already pretty far from the hardware -- and you have to cross your fingers and hope it infers the circuitry you want... To add another layer adds yet more uncertainty about what will come out, and you would still need to know verilog to make sure your translator is not generating something similar but different from what you want.

But there is no accounting for taste or poor judgement. I am sure your friend knows what they are doing.

Original Post

🌒 s/FPGA

A 6502 on a $20 Tang Nano 9K — Ah, after some fiddling, got a minimal 6502 system flashing an LED. Running at stock 27MHz, with 2K RAM and 2K ROM. The FPGA has 48K of block RAM and an HDMI interface, so I could build, say, a credible Apple 2, or an Atari -- the CPU consumes just over 10℅ of resources. There is also an SD card interface and an 64mbit SDRAM, and a bunch of Flash, and an LCD interface... Not bad for $20.

💬 stack [mod] · 11 comments · 2 likes · Jul 30 · 5 weeks ago