Type of digital logic implemented by Boolean circuits
Not to be confused with combinatory logic, a topic in mathematical logic.
Classes of automata
(Clicking on each layer gets an article on that subject)
In automata theory, combinational logic (also referred to as time-independent logic[1]) is a type of digital logic that is implemented by Boolean circuits, where the output is a pure function of the present input only. This is in contrast to sequential logic, in which the output depends not only on the present input but also on the history of the input. In other words, sequential logic has memory while combinational logic does not.
Practical design of combinational logic systems may require consideration of the finite time required for practical logical elements to react to changes in their inputs. Where an output is the result of the combination of several different paths with differing numbers of switching elements, the output may momentarily change state before settling at the final state, as the changes propagate along different paths. [2]
Representation
Combinational logic is used to build circuits that produce specified outputs from certain inputs. The construction of combinational logic is generally done using one of two methods: a sum of products, or a product of sums. Consider the following truth table:
Using sum of products, all logical statements which yield true results are summed, giving the result:
Using Boolean algebra, the result simplifies to the following equivalent of the truth table:
Logic formula minimization
Minimization (simplification) of combinational logic formulas is done using the following rules based on the laws of Boolean algebra:
With the use of minimization (sometimes called logic optimization), a simplified logical function or circuit may be arrived upon, and the logic combinational circuit becomes smaller, and easier to analyse, use, or build.