Talk:Latch
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Latches/Flops
My digital design friends tell me there's a distinction between latches and flip-flops. Larsbrinkhoff (talk)
- Your friends are right. Wikipedia uses the confusing 'a flip-flop or latch is..', which is easy to interpret to mean that 'latch' is just another word for 'flip-flop', which is not what is meant. There is a distinction, although there's overlap (b/c there are different types of latches). And when I design something I think of latches and flip-flops as entirely different things (e.g. flip-flops to divide or fix clock signals, latches to buffer/hold data). (Here's a web page which talks about flip-flops vs latches): http://www.electronicsteacher.com/computer-architectures/digital-circuits/flip-flops.php Tor (talk) 09:35, 12 March 2018 (CET)
- Thanks. Then maybe the redirect from Latch to Flip-flop isn't entirely appropriate. Although, it might be better than nothing. Larsbrinkhoff (talk)
- In current terminology, the two indeed refer to sets of things which do not overlap. However, after thinking about it (which I hadn't done before :-), I still think it might be appropriate to cover them in one article:
- They are both devices which use feedback to store information
- Separate articles would therefore have a lot of duplication
- Historically (and this is a history wiki :-), the terms were not so carefully delineated; e.g. in Pfister's book (he's the guy who came up with the whole SR/D/JK/T nomenclature), he talks about "R-S flip-flops"
I will definitely try and make clearer (than it already is) that in contemporary terminology, the two terms refer to disjoint sets. See what you think... Jnc (talk) 14:15, 13 March 2018 (CET)