Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: the 7476 is master-slave, the 74LS76 is master-slave
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:The 74xx TTL family and the 74LSxx low-power Schottky TTL family include many functionally equivalent parts with different speed and power characteristics. The 7476 and 74LS76 are both dual J–K flip-flops with asynchronous preset and clear. It is easy to confuse these with strictly edge-triggered variants such as the 74LS109, so knowing which are master–slave helps you read datasheets correctly and design reliable counters and registers.
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:Master–slave J–K flip-flops effectively sample on one phase and transfer on the opposite phase of the clock, achieving edge-like behavior but using two level-sensitive stages. Datasheet summaries and logic diagrams show that both 7476 and 74LS76 are master–slave devices; truly edge-triggered J–K devices carry different part numbers (e.g., 74LS109, 74LS112 families).
Step-by-Step Solution:
1) Identify function blocks: both include master and slave latches.2) Confirm asynchronous inputs (preset, clear) exist on both.3) Recognize that the LS suffix denotes process improvement, not a change to edge-triggered architecture.4) Conclude both are master–slave J–K flip-flops.Verification / Alternative check:Cross-reference catalog listings: 7476/74LS76 are master–slave; 74LS109 is explicitly positive edge-triggered, highlighting the architectural distinction.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Common Pitfalls:Equating LS variants with functional changes; LS affects speed/power, not the fundamental logic function.
Final Answer:the 7476 is master-slave, the 74LS76 is master-slave
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