Manhattan Wiring (electronics)
"Manhattan wiring" is an electronics term. The wiring supposedly looks like Manhattan's grid system of streets.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_wiring
Manhattan wiring (also known as right-angle wiring) is a technique for laying out circuits in computer engineering. Inputs to a circuit (specifically, the interconnects from the inputs) are aligned into a grid, and the circuit "taps" (connects to) them perpedicularly. This may be done either virtually or physically - that is, it may be shown this way only on the documentation and the actual circuit may look nothing like that; or it may be lain out that way on the physical chip. Typically, separate lanes are used for the inverted inputs and are tapped separately.
The name Manhattan wiring comes from looking at such a circuit diagram. It is reminiscent of how the roads in Manhattan, New York tend to criss-cross in a very regular grid.
Manhattan wiring is often used to represent a programmable logic array.
(Google Books)
Multichip Modules - Page 11
edited by Ernest S. Kuh - 1992
Still another possibility is to consider different physical wiring media, where the user can trade off manhattan wiring versus diagonal wiring.
(Google Books)
Automatic Programming Applied to Vlsi CAD Software: A Case Study - Page 61
by Dorothy E Setliff, Rob A Rutenbar - Computers - 1990 - 256 pages
As an example of this, again consider the impact of allowing 45 degree wiring in addition to Manhattan wiring. This has an obvious effect on all data
(Google Groups)
schematiX11 DesignEntry Tools
... with unlimited pages - user extensible netlisting capability; - optional snap to port wiring - choice of manhattan or non-manhattan wiring - all menu commands ...
comp.newprod - Jan 17 1994, 7:42 pm by Information Request - 1 message - 1 author
(Google Groups)
Latest Athlon 64 product introductions
... horizontally and vertically. "Manhattan" wiring (streets on one side, avenues on the other) to hook everything together. Yes, you ...
comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips - Jun 9 2004, 7:36 pm by K Williams - 53 messages - 15 authors
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_wiring
Manhattan wiring (also known as right-angle wiring) is a technique for laying out circuits in computer engineering. Inputs to a circuit (specifically, the interconnects from the inputs) are aligned into a grid, and the circuit "taps" (connects to) them perpedicularly. This may be done either virtually or physically - that is, it may be shown this way only on the documentation and the actual circuit may look nothing like that; or it may be lain out that way on the physical chip. Typically, separate lanes are used for the inverted inputs and are tapped separately.
The name Manhattan wiring comes from looking at such a circuit diagram. It is reminiscent of how the roads in Manhattan, New York tend to criss-cross in a very regular grid.
Manhattan wiring is often used to represent a programmable logic array.
(Google Books)
Multichip Modules - Page 11
edited by Ernest S. Kuh - 1992
Still another possibility is to consider different physical wiring media, where the user can trade off manhattan wiring versus diagonal wiring.
(Google Books)
Automatic Programming Applied to Vlsi CAD Software: A Case Study - Page 61
by Dorothy E Setliff, Rob A Rutenbar - Computers - 1990 - 256 pages
As an example of this, again consider the impact of allowing 45 degree wiring in addition to Manhattan wiring. This has an obvious effect on all data
(Google Groups)
schematiX11 DesignEntry Tools
... with unlimited pages - user extensible netlisting capability; - optional snap to port wiring - choice of manhattan or non-manhattan wiring - all menu commands ...
comp.newprod - Jan 17 1994, 7:42 pm by Information Request - 1 message - 1 author
(Google Groups)
Latest Athlon 64 product introductions
... horizontally and vertically. "Manhattan" wiring (streets on one side, avenues on the other) to hook everything together. Yes, you ...
comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips - Jun 9 2004, 7:36 pm by K Williams - 53 messages - 15 authors