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Electronic hardware

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(Redirected from Hardware logic)

Electronic hardware consist of interconnected electronic components which perform analog, or logic operations on received and locally stored information to produce as output, or store resulting new information or to provide control for output actuator mechanisms.

Electronic hardware can range from individual chips/circuits, to distributed information-processing systems. Well-designed electronic hardware is composed of hierarchies of functional modules which inter-communicate via precisely defined interfaces.[1]

Hardware logic is primarily a differentiation of the data processing circuitry from other more generalized circuitry. For example nearly all computers include a power supply which consists of circuitry not involved in data processing but rather powering the data processing circuits. Similarly, a computer may output information to a computer monitor or audio amplifier which is also not involved in the computational processes.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Electronics". www.mdpi.com. Retrieved 2024-02-22.