How does a biquinary adder work? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Why did the IBM 650 use bi-quinary?

Do I really need to have a message in a novel to appeal to readers?

Has negative voting ever been officially implemented in elections, or seriously proposed, or even studied?

Customizing QGIS plugins

Why do early math courses focus on the cross sections of a cone and not on other 3D objects?

Crossing US/Canada Border for less than 24 hours

Drawing spherical mirrors

preposition before coffee

Why does it sometimes sound good to play a grace note as a lead in to a note in a melody?

Sentence with dass with three Verbs (One modal and two connected with zu)

What is an "asse" in Elizabethan English?

How do I find out the mythology and history of my Fortress?

How to align multiple equations

Why can't I install Tomboy in Ubuntu Mate 19.04?

Antipodal Land Area Calculation

How to run automated tests after each commit?

What would you call this weird metallic apparatus that allows you to lift people?

How much damage would a cupful of neutron star matter do to the Earth?

Would it be easier to apply for a UK visa if there is a host family to sponsor for you in going there?

An adverb for when you're not exaggerating

The Nth Gryphon Number

Is there public access to the Meteor Crater in Arizona?

What are the discoveries that have been possible with the rejection of positivism?

Significance of Cersei's obsession with elephants?

Can I infer the range of a random variable based on a confidence interval for the mean?



How does a biquinary adder work?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Why did the IBM 650 use bi-quinary?










14















I whipped together a quick answer to this question and then realised, that I have no idea how these tubes manipulate the numbers. A binary adder is easy to understand to the modern mind; for each bit you can use an XOR for the result, and an AND for the carry.



But what about biquinary? how does 7 + 3 work out as 0 + carry, or 2 + 3 work out as 5, or 1 + 1 = 2?



Another way to phrase the question:
What digital circuit can do an addition like this:?



 01 00010 (that's a three to you and me)
+ 01 00100 (that's two)
= 10 10000 (five; note the upper thing got flipped and the lower thing moved two spaces rightward)


How is this happening?










share|improve this question
























  • I have created the biquinary

    – Wilson
    Apr 15 at 10:32






  • 2





    Off topic. The abacus uses a biquinary representation of the operands. That's about as retro as you can get.

    – Walter Mitty
    Apr 15 at 10:34











  • I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this is a question about basic electronics, not computing. Adding tubes to this doesn't change it anyway. Further there are plenty of explanation of these basics in common literature and the web.

    – Raffzahn
    Apr 15 at 14:13







  • 1





    How did the adder work in the IBM 650?

    – Walter Mitty
    Apr 15 at 15:30






  • 3





    @WalterMitty that's the question.

    – Wilson
    Apr 15 at 15:31















14















I whipped together a quick answer to this question and then realised, that I have no idea how these tubes manipulate the numbers. A binary adder is easy to understand to the modern mind; for each bit you can use an XOR for the result, and an AND for the carry.



But what about biquinary? how does 7 + 3 work out as 0 + carry, or 2 + 3 work out as 5, or 1 + 1 = 2?



Another way to phrase the question:
What digital circuit can do an addition like this:?



 01 00010 (that's a three to you and me)
+ 01 00100 (that's two)
= 10 10000 (five; note the upper thing got flipped and the lower thing moved two spaces rightward)


How is this happening?










share|improve this question
























  • I have created the biquinary

    – Wilson
    Apr 15 at 10:32






  • 2





    Off topic. The abacus uses a biquinary representation of the operands. That's about as retro as you can get.

    – Walter Mitty
    Apr 15 at 10:34











  • I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this is a question about basic electronics, not computing. Adding tubes to this doesn't change it anyway. Further there are plenty of explanation of these basics in common literature and the web.

    – Raffzahn
    Apr 15 at 14:13







  • 1





    How did the adder work in the IBM 650?

    – Walter Mitty
    Apr 15 at 15:30






  • 3





    @WalterMitty that's the question.

    – Wilson
    Apr 15 at 15:31













14












14








14








I whipped together a quick answer to this question and then realised, that I have no idea how these tubes manipulate the numbers. A binary adder is easy to understand to the modern mind; for each bit you can use an XOR for the result, and an AND for the carry.



But what about biquinary? how does 7 + 3 work out as 0 + carry, or 2 + 3 work out as 5, or 1 + 1 = 2?



Another way to phrase the question:
What digital circuit can do an addition like this:?



 01 00010 (that's a three to you and me)
+ 01 00100 (that's two)
= 10 10000 (five; note the upper thing got flipped and the lower thing moved two spaces rightward)


How is this happening?










share|improve this question
















I whipped together a quick answer to this question and then realised, that I have no idea how these tubes manipulate the numbers. A binary adder is easy to understand to the modern mind; for each bit you can use an XOR for the result, and an AND for the carry.



But what about biquinary? how does 7 + 3 work out as 0 + carry, or 2 + 3 work out as 5, or 1 + 1 = 2?



Another way to phrase the question:
What digital circuit can do an addition like this:?



 01 00010 (that's a three to you and me)
+ 01 00100 (that's two)
= 10 10000 (five; note the upper thing got flipped and the lower thing moved two spaces rightward)


How is this happening?







biquinary






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 15 at 10:40







Wilson

















asked Apr 15 at 10:31









WilsonWilson

12.8k658145




12.8k658145












  • I have created the biquinary

    – Wilson
    Apr 15 at 10:32






  • 2





    Off topic. The abacus uses a biquinary representation of the operands. That's about as retro as you can get.

    – Walter Mitty
    Apr 15 at 10:34











  • I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this is a question about basic electronics, not computing. Adding tubes to this doesn't change it anyway. Further there are plenty of explanation of these basics in common literature and the web.

    – Raffzahn
    Apr 15 at 14:13







  • 1





    How did the adder work in the IBM 650?

    – Walter Mitty
    Apr 15 at 15:30






  • 3





    @WalterMitty that's the question.

    – Wilson
    Apr 15 at 15:31

















  • I have created the biquinary

    – Wilson
    Apr 15 at 10:32






  • 2





    Off topic. The abacus uses a biquinary representation of the operands. That's about as retro as you can get.

    – Walter Mitty
    Apr 15 at 10:34











  • I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this is a question about basic electronics, not computing. Adding tubes to this doesn't change it anyway. Further there are plenty of explanation of these basics in common literature and the web.

    – Raffzahn
    Apr 15 at 14:13







  • 1





    How did the adder work in the IBM 650?

    – Walter Mitty
    Apr 15 at 15:30






  • 3





    @WalterMitty that's the question.

    – Wilson
    Apr 15 at 15:31
















I have created the biquinary

– Wilson
Apr 15 at 10:32





I have created the biquinary

– Wilson
Apr 15 at 10:32




2




2





Off topic. The abacus uses a biquinary representation of the operands. That's about as retro as you can get.

– Walter Mitty
Apr 15 at 10:34





Off topic. The abacus uses a biquinary representation of the operands. That's about as retro as you can get.

– Walter Mitty
Apr 15 at 10:34













I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this is a question about basic electronics, not computing. Adding tubes to this doesn't change it anyway. Further there are plenty of explanation of these basics in common literature and the web.

– Raffzahn
Apr 15 at 14:13






I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this is a question about basic electronics, not computing. Adding tubes to this doesn't change it anyway. Further there are plenty of explanation of these basics in common literature and the web.

– Raffzahn
Apr 15 at 14:13





1




1





How did the adder work in the IBM 650?

– Walter Mitty
Apr 15 at 15:30





How did the adder work in the IBM 650?

– Walter Mitty
Apr 15 at 15:30




3




3





@WalterMitty that's the question.

– Wilson
Apr 15 at 15:31





@WalterMitty that's the question.

– Wilson
Apr 15 at 15:31










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















15














From a modern chip design perspective, the design of bi-quinary adders is quite simple. The addend inputs are each composed of two 1-hot signals, and the sum output is two 1-hot signals as well. This is by the nature of bi-quinary, where the quinary part is 1-hot by definition and the binary part is a 2-bit signal that is 1-hot by convention, being either 01 for "zero" or 10 for "five". The latter also being 1-hot makes things easier.



A simple AND-OR tree suffices for adding these. In a biquinary half-adder each one of the outputs in the sum is just a multiple-input OR of the ANDs of the various input combinations that result in that digit. For examples: C4 is a multiple-input OR of ANDs of all of the bit combinations in A and B that result in a "four" in the quinary part. C00 is multiple-input OR of ANDs of all of the bit combinations in A and B that result in a "zero" in the binary part.



In a biquinary full-adder there is not all that much added complexity. The carry-in simply left-rotates the quinary part of one of the addends, and any rotation off the left-hand end of that addend is an extra input to the tree that sums the binary parts, alongside any carry from the addition of the quinary parts.



That is the modern view, at any rate. It was not quite done that way back in the days of relays.



The AND-OR tree was a matrix of relays, each combination of signals opening up a specific path (to ground) for the appropriate 1-hot outputs.



Carry-in and carry-out were also a 1-hot pair of wires, 01 for "no carry" and 10 for "carry". This, in combination with the binary parts of each addend being 1-hot, meant that the "binary side" of the adder was also a simple exercise in AND-OR logic, and a relay matrix too. And, of course, so to was the rotation.



Caesaro 1946 has a diagram of the relay matrix for a 1-digit biquinary full-adder in the Bell Laboratories' Relay Interpolator. Das et al. 2015 has a more modern block diagram and truth tables for the various outputs. It places the carry-in handling logic closer to the final output, rotating an intermediate result instead of one of the addends, does not have 1-hot carry, does not have 1-hot binary parts for the addends, and uses inverters (where a 1-hot design of course does not).



Further reading



  • O. Caesaro (1946). "The Relay Interpolator". In B. Randell: The Origins of Digital Computers: Selected Papers. Springer Science & Business Media. 2012. ISBN 9783642961458. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-61812-3_20

  • Kunal Das, Arijit Dey, Dipannita Podder, Mallika De, and Debashis De (2015). "Quantum Dot Cellular Automata: A Promising Paradigm Beyond Moore". In Mourad Fakhfakh, Esteban Tlelo-Cuautle, and Patrick Siarry: Computational Intelligence in Digital and Network Designs and Applications. Springer. ISBN 9783319200712. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-20071-2_11.

  • William Keister (1951). "Circuits for calculation". The Design of Switching Circuits. Bell Telephone Laboratories series. Van Nostrand. pp. 462–472.





share|improve this answer


















  • 3





    In short, you use a "lookup table", just like when kids first learn addition. This is realized in hardware as a relay matrix. I'd still love to see how this was actually wired in something like the IBM 650, though - did they actually use the full 5x5 matrix (for the quinary part), or did they find some way to reduce it? How many relays (or tubes, in 650) did the full adder take? In any case, great answer, and especially the Keister reference goes very deep into the subject matter :)

    – Luaan
    Apr 15 at 15:37











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "648"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fretrocomputing.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f9680%2fhow-does-a-biquinary-adder-work%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









15














From a modern chip design perspective, the design of bi-quinary adders is quite simple. The addend inputs are each composed of two 1-hot signals, and the sum output is two 1-hot signals as well. This is by the nature of bi-quinary, where the quinary part is 1-hot by definition and the binary part is a 2-bit signal that is 1-hot by convention, being either 01 for "zero" or 10 for "five". The latter also being 1-hot makes things easier.



A simple AND-OR tree suffices for adding these. In a biquinary half-adder each one of the outputs in the sum is just a multiple-input OR of the ANDs of the various input combinations that result in that digit. For examples: C4 is a multiple-input OR of ANDs of all of the bit combinations in A and B that result in a "four" in the quinary part. C00 is multiple-input OR of ANDs of all of the bit combinations in A and B that result in a "zero" in the binary part.



In a biquinary full-adder there is not all that much added complexity. The carry-in simply left-rotates the quinary part of one of the addends, and any rotation off the left-hand end of that addend is an extra input to the tree that sums the binary parts, alongside any carry from the addition of the quinary parts.



That is the modern view, at any rate. It was not quite done that way back in the days of relays.



The AND-OR tree was a matrix of relays, each combination of signals opening up a specific path (to ground) for the appropriate 1-hot outputs.



Carry-in and carry-out were also a 1-hot pair of wires, 01 for "no carry" and 10 for "carry". This, in combination with the binary parts of each addend being 1-hot, meant that the "binary side" of the adder was also a simple exercise in AND-OR logic, and a relay matrix too. And, of course, so to was the rotation.



Caesaro 1946 has a diagram of the relay matrix for a 1-digit biquinary full-adder in the Bell Laboratories' Relay Interpolator. Das et al. 2015 has a more modern block diagram and truth tables for the various outputs. It places the carry-in handling logic closer to the final output, rotating an intermediate result instead of one of the addends, does not have 1-hot carry, does not have 1-hot binary parts for the addends, and uses inverters (where a 1-hot design of course does not).



Further reading



  • O. Caesaro (1946). "The Relay Interpolator". In B. Randell: The Origins of Digital Computers: Selected Papers. Springer Science & Business Media. 2012. ISBN 9783642961458. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-61812-3_20

  • Kunal Das, Arijit Dey, Dipannita Podder, Mallika De, and Debashis De (2015). "Quantum Dot Cellular Automata: A Promising Paradigm Beyond Moore". In Mourad Fakhfakh, Esteban Tlelo-Cuautle, and Patrick Siarry: Computational Intelligence in Digital and Network Designs and Applications. Springer. ISBN 9783319200712. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-20071-2_11.

  • William Keister (1951). "Circuits for calculation". The Design of Switching Circuits. Bell Telephone Laboratories series. Van Nostrand. pp. 462–472.





share|improve this answer


















  • 3





    In short, you use a "lookup table", just like when kids first learn addition. This is realized in hardware as a relay matrix. I'd still love to see how this was actually wired in something like the IBM 650, though - did they actually use the full 5x5 matrix (for the quinary part), or did they find some way to reduce it? How many relays (or tubes, in 650) did the full adder take? In any case, great answer, and especially the Keister reference goes very deep into the subject matter :)

    – Luaan
    Apr 15 at 15:37















15














From a modern chip design perspective, the design of bi-quinary adders is quite simple. The addend inputs are each composed of two 1-hot signals, and the sum output is two 1-hot signals as well. This is by the nature of bi-quinary, where the quinary part is 1-hot by definition and the binary part is a 2-bit signal that is 1-hot by convention, being either 01 for "zero" or 10 for "five". The latter also being 1-hot makes things easier.



A simple AND-OR tree suffices for adding these. In a biquinary half-adder each one of the outputs in the sum is just a multiple-input OR of the ANDs of the various input combinations that result in that digit. For examples: C4 is a multiple-input OR of ANDs of all of the bit combinations in A and B that result in a "four" in the quinary part. C00 is multiple-input OR of ANDs of all of the bit combinations in A and B that result in a "zero" in the binary part.



In a biquinary full-adder there is not all that much added complexity. The carry-in simply left-rotates the quinary part of one of the addends, and any rotation off the left-hand end of that addend is an extra input to the tree that sums the binary parts, alongside any carry from the addition of the quinary parts.



That is the modern view, at any rate. It was not quite done that way back in the days of relays.



The AND-OR tree was a matrix of relays, each combination of signals opening up a specific path (to ground) for the appropriate 1-hot outputs.



Carry-in and carry-out were also a 1-hot pair of wires, 01 for "no carry" and 10 for "carry". This, in combination with the binary parts of each addend being 1-hot, meant that the "binary side" of the adder was also a simple exercise in AND-OR logic, and a relay matrix too. And, of course, so to was the rotation.



Caesaro 1946 has a diagram of the relay matrix for a 1-digit biquinary full-adder in the Bell Laboratories' Relay Interpolator. Das et al. 2015 has a more modern block diagram and truth tables for the various outputs. It places the carry-in handling logic closer to the final output, rotating an intermediate result instead of one of the addends, does not have 1-hot carry, does not have 1-hot binary parts for the addends, and uses inverters (where a 1-hot design of course does not).



Further reading



  • O. Caesaro (1946). "The Relay Interpolator". In B. Randell: The Origins of Digital Computers: Selected Papers. Springer Science & Business Media. 2012. ISBN 9783642961458. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-61812-3_20

  • Kunal Das, Arijit Dey, Dipannita Podder, Mallika De, and Debashis De (2015). "Quantum Dot Cellular Automata: A Promising Paradigm Beyond Moore". In Mourad Fakhfakh, Esteban Tlelo-Cuautle, and Patrick Siarry: Computational Intelligence in Digital and Network Designs and Applications. Springer. ISBN 9783319200712. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-20071-2_11.

  • William Keister (1951). "Circuits for calculation". The Design of Switching Circuits. Bell Telephone Laboratories series. Van Nostrand. pp. 462–472.





share|improve this answer


















  • 3





    In short, you use a "lookup table", just like when kids first learn addition. This is realized in hardware as a relay matrix. I'd still love to see how this was actually wired in something like the IBM 650, though - did they actually use the full 5x5 matrix (for the quinary part), or did they find some way to reduce it? How many relays (or tubes, in 650) did the full adder take? In any case, great answer, and especially the Keister reference goes very deep into the subject matter :)

    – Luaan
    Apr 15 at 15:37













15












15








15







From a modern chip design perspective, the design of bi-quinary adders is quite simple. The addend inputs are each composed of two 1-hot signals, and the sum output is two 1-hot signals as well. This is by the nature of bi-quinary, where the quinary part is 1-hot by definition and the binary part is a 2-bit signal that is 1-hot by convention, being either 01 for "zero" or 10 for "five". The latter also being 1-hot makes things easier.



A simple AND-OR tree suffices for adding these. In a biquinary half-adder each one of the outputs in the sum is just a multiple-input OR of the ANDs of the various input combinations that result in that digit. For examples: C4 is a multiple-input OR of ANDs of all of the bit combinations in A and B that result in a "four" in the quinary part. C00 is multiple-input OR of ANDs of all of the bit combinations in A and B that result in a "zero" in the binary part.



In a biquinary full-adder there is not all that much added complexity. The carry-in simply left-rotates the quinary part of one of the addends, and any rotation off the left-hand end of that addend is an extra input to the tree that sums the binary parts, alongside any carry from the addition of the quinary parts.



That is the modern view, at any rate. It was not quite done that way back in the days of relays.



The AND-OR tree was a matrix of relays, each combination of signals opening up a specific path (to ground) for the appropriate 1-hot outputs.



Carry-in and carry-out were also a 1-hot pair of wires, 01 for "no carry" and 10 for "carry". This, in combination with the binary parts of each addend being 1-hot, meant that the "binary side" of the adder was also a simple exercise in AND-OR logic, and a relay matrix too. And, of course, so to was the rotation.



Caesaro 1946 has a diagram of the relay matrix for a 1-digit biquinary full-adder in the Bell Laboratories' Relay Interpolator. Das et al. 2015 has a more modern block diagram and truth tables for the various outputs. It places the carry-in handling logic closer to the final output, rotating an intermediate result instead of one of the addends, does not have 1-hot carry, does not have 1-hot binary parts for the addends, and uses inverters (where a 1-hot design of course does not).



Further reading



  • O. Caesaro (1946). "The Relay Interpolator". In B. Randell: The Origins of Digital Computers: Selected Papers. Springer Science & Business Media. 2012. ISBN 9783642961458. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-61812-3_20

  • Kunal Das, Arijit Dey, Dipannita Podder, Mallika De, and Debashis De (2015). "Quantum Dot Cellular Automata: A Promising Paradigm Beyond Moore". In Mourad Fakhfakh, Esteban Tlelo-Cuautle, and Patrick Siarry: Computational Intelligence in Digital and Network Designs and Applications. Springer. ISBN 9783319200712. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-20071-2_11.

  • William Keister (1951). "Circuits for calculation". The Design of Switching Circuits. Bell Telephone Laboratories series. Van Nostrand. pp. 462–472.





share|improve this answer













From a modern chip design perspective, the design of bi-quinary adders is quite simple. The addend inputs are each composed of two 1-hot signals, and the sum output is two 1-hot signals as well. This is by the nature of bi-quinary, where the quinary part is 1-hot by definition and the binary part is a 2-bit signal that is 1-hot by convention, being either 01 for "zero" or 10 for "five". The latter also being 1-hot makes things easier.



A simple AND-OR tree suffices for adding these. In a biquinary half-adder each one of the outputs in the sum is just a multiple-input OR of the ANDs of the various input combinations that result in that digit. For examples: C4 is a multiple-input OR of ANDs of all of the bit combinations in A and B that result in a "four" in the quinary part. C00 is multiple-input OR of ANDs of all of the bit combinations in A and B that result in a "zero" in the binary part.



In a biquinary full-adder there is not all that much added complexity. The carry-in simply left-rotates the quinary part of one of the addends, and any rotation off the left-hand end of that addend is an extra input to the tree that sums the binary parts, alongside any carry from the addition of the quinary parts.



That is the modern view, at any rate. It was not quite done that way back in the days of relays.



The AND-OR tree was a matrix of relays, each combination of signals opening up a specific path (to ground) for the appropriate 1-hot outputs.



Carry-in and carry-out were also a 1-hot pair of wires, 01 for "no carry" and 10 for "carry". This, in combination with the binary parts of each addend being 1-hot, meant that the "binary side" of the adder was also a simple exercise in AND-OR logic, and a relay matrix too. And, of course, so to was the rotation.



Caesaro 1946 has a diagram of the relay matrix for a 1-digit biquinary full-adder in the Bell Laboratories' Relay Interpolator. Das et al. 2015 has a more modern block diagram and truth tables for the various outputs. It places the carry-in handling logic closer to the final output, rotating an intermediate result instead of one of the addends, does not have 1-hot carry, does not have 1-hot binary parts for the addends, and uses inverters (where a 1-hot design of course does not).



Further reading



  • O. Caesaro (1946). "The Relay Interpolator". In B. Randell: The Origins of Digital Computers: Selected Papers. Springer Science & Business Media. 2012. ISBN 9783642961458. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-61812-3_20

  • Kunal Das, Arijit Dey, Dipannita Podder, Mallika De, and Debashis De (2015). "Quantum Dot Cellular Automata: A Promising Paradigm Beyond Moore". In Mourad Fakhfakh, Esteban Tlelo-Cuautle, and Patrick Siarry: Computational Intelligence in Digital and Network Designs and Applications. Springer. ISBN 9783319200712. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-20071-2_11.

  • William Keister (1951). "Circuits for calculation". The Design of Switching Circuits. Bell Telephone Laboratories series. Van Nostrand. pp. 462–472.






share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 15 at 13:55









JdeBPJdeBP

49527




49527







  • 3





    In short, you use a "lookup table", just like when kids first learn addition. This is realized in hardware as a relay matrix. I'd still love to see how this was actually wired in something like the IBM 650, though - did they actually use the full 5x5 matrix (for the quinary part), or did they find some way to reduce it? How many relays (or tubes, in 650) did the full adder take? In any case, great answer, and especially the Keister reference goes very deep into the subject matter :)

    – Luaan
    Apr 15 at 15:37












  • 3





    In short, you use a "lookup table", just like when kids first learn addition. This is realized in hardware as a relay matrix. I'd still love to see how this was actually wired in something like the IBM 650, though - did they actually use the full 5x5 matrix (for the quinary part), or did they find some way to reduce it? How many relays (or tubes, in 650) did the full adder take? In any case, great answer, and especially the Keister reference goes very deep into the subject matter :)

    – Luaan
    Apr 15 at 15:37







3




3





In short, you use a "lookup table", just like when kids first learn addition. This is realized in hardware as a relay matrix. I'd still love to see how this was actually wired in something like the IBM 650, though - did they actually use the full 5x5 matrix (for the quinary part), or did they find some way to reduce it? How many relays (or tubes, in 650) did the full adder take? In any case, great answer, and especially the Keister reference goes very deep into the subject matter :)

– Luaan
Apr 15 at 15:37





In short, you use a "lookup table", just like when kids first learn addition. This is realized in hardware as a relay matrix. I'd still love to see how this was actually wired in something like the IBM 650, though - did they actually use the full 5x5 matrix (for the quinary part), or did they find some way to reduce it? How many relays (or tubes, in 650) did the full adder take? In any case, great answer, and especially the Keister reference goes very deep into the subject matter :)

– Luaan
Apr 15 at 15:37

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Retrocomputing Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fretrocomputing.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f9680%2fhow-does-a-biquinary-adder-work%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Bulk add to cart function issuecart vs. mini cart issue … rwd themeRedirect Add to cart button to cart pageAdd to cart issue - Magento 2.1The requested Payment Method is not available When creating an orderM2: reason add-to-cart might not function in production modeAdd to cart issue in some android devicesMagento 2 - custom price can not add to subtotal and grand total after add to cartAdd to cart codeIssue with my cart module on pdp and cart pages, just keeps spinningBulk price and quantity update using rest api

Magento2 - How to hide price filter only in specific categories?Multiselect price filter attribute in layered navigationhide only some categories from layered navigation in magentoRemove Price Filter on certain categoriescustomize layered price filter?Hide Price for a particular customer groupPrice filter in layered navigation not working correctly with price including tax in magento 2.2.3Magento 2 how to hide attribute at Layered navigation?Magento 2. how to hide price only for specific categoriesMagento 2 How can I hide the price and total from cart and checkout summary?Magento2: Can we add navigation layered filter like price filter for other attribute?