by Tarun Agarwal 2 years ago Up/Down Counter : Working, Circuit, IC74193 Pin Out & Its Applications In digital logic & computing, a sequential circuit that is used to count pulses is called a counter. A counter is a set of FFs including an applied CLK signal and this is the broad application of FFs. These are designed as separate...
by Tarun Agarwal 2 years ago What is Synchronous Counter : Working & Its Applications A counter can be defined as a device that is used to count a specific event based on the events that occurred. The main role of this counter within computers or a digital logic system is to count & store how many times a process or...
by Tarun Agarwal 3 years ago What is a BCD Counter : Circuit & Its Working In digital and logical circuits, a sequential circuit called a counter is necessary to count the input pulses. The counter is designed by a group of flip-flops with an applied clock signal. A BCD counter is one of the types of most widely...
by Tarun Agarwal 4 years ago What is Frequency Counter : Circuit Diagram & Its Working In digital electronics, counters are used to count the no.of pulses or events that have occurred. Counters store the data and made up of a group of flip-flops with an applied clock signal. Counters are capable of measuring frequency and...
by Tarun Agarwal 4 years ago What is Johnson Counter : Circuit Diagram, Truth Table & Its Applications In digital electronics, johnson counters are used to store or process or count the number of events occurred within the circuit. It is one of the digital sequential logic circuits that count several pulses. These are designed with a group...
by Tarun Agarwal 4 years ago What is a Ring Counter : Working, Classification & Applications Counters are sequential circuits whose function is to count pulse, frequency and time of the signal using a single clock signal. It is an important component of digital electronics since entire electronic devices work on counters. They...
by Tarun Agarwal 11 years ago What is an IC 4017 : Pin Configuration & Its Application Most of us are more comfortable with 1, 2, 3, 4… rather than 001, 010, 011, 100. We mean to say that we will need a decimal coded output in many cases rather than a raw binary output. We have many counter ICs available but most of them...