

Comes with a good library of common circuits like 4 bit adders, etc. Maybe this is normal for industry software, but I want something fast, solid, and intuitive for studying. You have to set the values of the inputs on a time graph and then run it, and you see the results as graphs of the outputs over time. The software is clunky, sluggish, requires frequent restarts, and is generally buggy. The labs use Xilinx FPGA dev boards (Basys 2's) and version 1.92 of their ISE programming software on what I'm pretty sure are Pentium or early Core 2 era Dell workstations running XP or W7 in classic UI mode. I'm in a digital systems class right now and we don't have any good simulation software.
