THE KEY THINGS YOUR MEMOS SHOULD DO
1 State the purpose of the
project in the first paragraph
The statement of purpose should give the specific function of the circuit you are reporting, and mention any design constraints. (If more than one circuit is to be built, a second paragraph states its purpose.)
2 Briefly present your
analysis and design work
(The next one or two paragraphs will do this.)
3 Present your
results–circuit diagrams and simulations
4 Actual technical material is
attached to the Memo as numbered figures and tables.
Figures and tables must be titled and labeled (see model memo).
Refer specifically to each and every attachment.
The final point you will make is to demonstrate with a simulation
that your design performs correctly.
(If more than one circuit is to be built, repeat the above)
5 Draw conclusions in the
final paragraph of the memo–these are very important!
Was the project successfully completed?--specifically state whether
the circuit(s) functioned as required, both in hardware and in simulation.
Please also make an observation or two about keys to success in
completing the project well
6 Follow the general form
of this memorandum
7 Carry a “hardware circuit score”
Added by your lab instructor when a hardware circuit is required
8 Convey your commitment to excellence
Be prepared with a word processor--no handwriting allowed except in the following three instances.
C Looping of minterms on K-maps
C Drawing of tree diagrams on word-processed equations
C Labeling timing diagrams.
Figure 1.