UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549


                               AMENDMENT NO.1 TO
                                    FORM 10-Q


      (MARK ONE)

          (X)     QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF
                  THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

                  FOR THE QUARTERLY PERIOD ENDED JULY 31, 2002

                           OR

          ( )     TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF
                  THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

                  FOR THE TRANSITION PERIOD FROM             TO

                         COMMISSION FILE NUMBER: 0-19807
                                ----------------

                                 SYNOPSYS, INC.
             (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

                     DELAWARE                                56-1546236
          ------------------------------              ----------------------
          (State or other jurisdiction of               (I.R.S. Employer
          incorporation or organization)              Identification Number)

                            700 EAST MIDDLEFIELD ROAD
                             MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA 94043
                    (Address of principal executive offices)

                            TELEPHONE: (650) 584-5000
              (Registrant's telephone number, including area code)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (l) has filed all reports required
to be filed by  Section  13,  or 15(d) of the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934
during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter  period that the  registrant
was  required  to file such  reports),  and (2) has been  subject to such filing
requirements for the past 90 days.

                                 Yes [X] No [ ]

Indicate the number of shares  outstanding  of each of the  issuer's  classes of
common stock, as of the latest practicable date.

            75,639,019 shares of Common Stock as of September 6, 2002

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                Explanatory Note


This  Amendment No.1 to the  Registrant's  Report on Form 10-Q for the quarterly
period ended July 31, 2002 is being filed in order to amend the weighted average
common shares and dilutive stock options outstanding  included in the "unaudited
pro  forma  results  of  operations"  in  note  3  to  the  unaudited  condensed
consolidated  financial  statements on page 12 and "Management's  Discussion and
Analysis of Financial condition and results of operations" on page 30.







                                 SYNOPSYS, INC.
                          QUARTERLY REPORT ON FORM 10-Q
                                  JULY 31, 2002

                                TABLE OF CONTENTS


PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION
ITEM 1.   FINANCIAL STATEMENTS.................................................3
          CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS................................3
          UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS............4
          UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF
            CASH FLOWS.........................................................5
          NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS.......6
ITEM 2.   MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
            AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS.........................................18
ITEM 3.   QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURE ABOUT MARKET RISK...........39

SIGNATURES....................................................................40




























                                       2





PART I

ITEM 1. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                                 SYNOPSYS, INC.
                      CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                      (in thousands, except per share data)



                                                                               JULY 31,         OCTOBER 31,
                                                                                 2002              2001
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------
                                                                              (UNAUDITED)
                                                                                       
ASSETS
Current assets:
  Cash and cash equivalents                                                 $      347,661    $    271,696
  Short-term investments                                                            98,547         204,740
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------
     Total cash and short-term investments                                         446,208         476,436
  Accounts receivable, net of allowances of $22,985 and
     $11,027, respectively                                                         233,157         146,294
  Deferred tax assets                                                              169,208         149,239
  Prepaid expenses and other                                                        54,973          19,413
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------
     Total current assets                                                          903,546         791,382

Property and equipment, net                                                        185,872         192,304
Long-term investments                                                               48,767          61,699
Goodwill, net                                                                      368,068          35,077
Intangible assets, net                                                             351,249           3,197
Restricted asset                                                                   240,000              --
Other assets                                                                        61,503          45,248
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------
     Total assets                                                           $    2,159,005    $  1,128,907
                                                                            ================ =================

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities:
  Accounts payable and accrued liabilities                                  $      233,756    $    135,272
  Current portion of long-term debt                                                    178             535
  Accrued income taxes                                                             123,338         110,561
  Deferred revenue                                                                 379,897         290,052
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------
     Total current liabilities                                                     737,169         536,420

Deferred compensation and other long-term liabilities                               50,400          17,124
Long-term deferred revenue                                                          63,167          89,707

Stockholders' equity:
  Preferred stock, $.01 par value; 2,000 shares authorized; no shares
     outstanding                                                                        --              --
  Common stock, $.01 par value; 400,000 shares authorized; 76,105 and
     59,428 shares outstanding, respectively                                           761             595
  Additional paid-in capital                                                     1,031,183         575,403
  Retained earnings                                                                303,755         436,662
  Treasury stock, at cost                                                           (9,875)       (531,117)
  Deferred stock compensation                                                       (7,592)             --
  Accumulated other comprehensive income                                            (9,963)          4,113
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------
     Total stockholders' equity                                                  1,308,269         485,656
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------
     Total liabilities and stockholders' equity                             $    2,159,005    $  1,128,907
                                                                            ================ =================



   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.



                                       3





                                 SYNOPSYS, INC.
            UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
                      (in thousands, except per share data)



                                                                 THREE MONTHS ENDED                  NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                      JULY 31,                            JULY 31,
                                                               2002              2001              2002              2001
                                                         ----------------- ----------------- ----------------- -----------------
                                                                                                   
Revenue:
   Product                                                  $   60,096        $   44,858        $  151,944        $  117,152
   Service                                                      73,924            81,430           208,782           259,900
   Ratable license                                             102,075            49,822           236,552           119,736
                                                         ----------------- ----------------- ----------------- -----------------
       Total revenue                                           236,095           176,110           597,278           496,788
                                                         ----------------- ----------------- ----------------- -----------------
Cost of revenue:
   Product                                                       4,400             6,086            11,687            17,616
   Service                                                      19,819            19,158            57,894            58,427
   Ratable license                                              10,101             7,476            34,321            19,689
  Amortization of intangible assets and
    deferred stock compensation                                 13,366                 -            13,366                 -
                                                         ----------------- ----------------- ----------------- -----------------
       Total cost of revenue                                    47,686            32,720           117,268            95,732
                                                         ----------------- ----------------- ----------------- -----------------
Gross margin                                                   188,409           143,390           480,010           401,056
Operating expenses:
  Research and development                                      61,581            49,382           156,936           143,239
  Sales and marketing                                           69,122            68,954           192,122           207,735
  General and administrative                                    21,908            19,140            58,153            50,933
  Integration                                                  117,266                 -           117,266                 -
  In-process research and development                           82,500                 -            82,500                 -
  Amortization of intangible  assets and deferred stock
    compensation                                                 8,820             4,163            17,220            12,514
                                                         ----------------- ----------------- ----------------- -----------------
       Total operating expenses                                361,197           141,639           624,197           414,421
                                                         ----------------- ----------------- ----------------- -----------------
Operating (loss) income                                       (172,788)            1,751          (144,187)          (13,365)
Other income, net                                               11,408            19,499            33,702            66,901
                                                         ----------------- ----------------- ----------------- -----------------
(Loss)  income  before  (benefit)  provision for income       (161,380)           21,250          (110,485)           53,536
  taxes
(Benefit) provision for income taxes                           (23,791)            6,800            (8,328)           17,132
                                                         ----------------- ----------------- ----------------- -----------------
       Net (loss) income                                    $ (137,589)       $   14,450        $ (102,157)       $   36,404
                                                         ================= ================= ================= =================

   Basic (loss) earnings per share                          $    (1.93)       $     0.24        $    (1.59)       $     0.60
                                                         ================= ================= ================= =================
   Weighted average common shares outstanding                   71,157            60,048            64,157            61,050
                                                         ================= ================= ================= =================

   Diluted (loss) earnings per share                        $    (1.93)       $     0.22        $    (1.59)       $     0.56
                                                         ================= ================= ================= =================
   Weighted average common shares
     and dilutive stock options outstanding                     71,157            64,887            64,157            65,362
                                                         ================= ================= ================= =================




   The  accompanying  notes are an integral part of these financial statements.



                                       4





                                 SYNOPSYS, INC.
            UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                                 (in thousands)



                                                                                    NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                        JULY 31,
                                                                            ----------------------------------
                                                                                 2002              2001
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------
                                                                                       
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
Net (loss) income                                                             $   (102,157)    $     36,404
Adjustments  to reconcile  net (loss)  income to net cash flows (used in)
   provided by operating activities:
  In-process research and development                                               82,500               --
   Depreciation and amortization                                                    69,835           48,149
   Tax benefit associated with stock options                                        18,001           14,603
    Impairment of land and buildings                                                14,712               --
    Impairment of long-term investments                                              7,539            4,348
   Provision for doubtful accounts and sales returns                                 3,065            2,237
    Deferred taxes                                                                  (3,967)              --
   Gain on sale of long-term investments                                           (21,393)         (43,128)
   Gain on sale of silicon libraries business                                           --          (10,580)
   Other                                                                             2,538              306
   Net changes in operating assets and liabilities:
     Accounts receivable                                                           (22,774)          12,491
     Prepaid expenses and other current assets                                       1,079           (2,366)
     Other assets                                                                   (7,323)            (414)
     Accounts payable and accrued liabilities                                      (75,978)         (22,008)
     Accrued income taxes                                                          (81,799)         (19,614)
     Deferred revenue                                                               33,225          100,153
     Deferred compensation                                                           4,748            2,781
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------
       Net cash (used in) provided by operating activities                         (78,149)         123,362
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------

CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
   Purchase of contingently refundable insurance policy                           (240,000)              --
   Cash acquired in the Avant! acquisition                                         234,963               --
   Purchases of property and equipment                                             (35,902)         (51,980)
   Purchases of short-term investments                                            (667,430)      (1,656,744)
   Proceeds from sales and maturities of short-term investments                    778,501        1,764,892
   Purchases of long-term investments                                               (5,205)         (11,000)
   Proceeds from sale of long-term investments                                      30,533           62,446
   Proceeds from the sale of silicon libraries business                                 --            4,122
   Purchase of intangible assets, net                                                   --             (166)
   Capitalization of software development costs                                     (1,194)            (750)
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------
       Net cash provided by investing activities                                    94,266          110,820
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------

CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
   Payments of debt obligations                                                         --           (6,468)
   Issuances of common stock                                                       103,595           89,310
   Purchases of treasury stock                                                     (41,773)        (331,878)
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------
       Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities                          61,822         (249,036)
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash                                             (1,974)          (3,762)
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents                                75,965          (18,616)
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period                                     271,696          153,120
                                                                            ---------------- -----------------
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period                                       $   347,661     $    134,504
                                                                            ================ =================

SUPPLEMENTAL NONCASH DISCLOSURES:
Issuance of stock and options in exchange for net assets of Avant!             $   858,421     $         --

  The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

                                       5



                                 SYNOPSYS, INC.
         NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

1.  DESCRIPTION OF COMPANY AND BASIS OF PRESENTATION

    Synopsys, Inc. (Synopsys or the Company) is a leading supplier of electronic
design automation (EDA) software to the global electronics industry. The Company
develops,  markets,  and supports a wide range of integrated circuit (IC) design
products that are used by designers of advanced ICs and the  electronic  systems
(such as  computers,  cell phones,  and internet  routers)  that use such ICs to
automate  significant portions of their IC design process. ICs are distinguished
by the speed at which they run, their area, the amount of power they consume and
their cost of production. Synopsys' products offer its customers the opportunity
to  design  ICs that are  optimized  for  speed,  area,  power  consumption  and
production  cost,  while reducing overall design time. The Company also provides
consulting  services to help its customers improve their IC design processes and
to assist them with their IC designs, as well as training and support services.

    The Company's  fiscal year ends on the Saturday  nearest  October 31. Fiscal
year 2001 was a 53-week  year,  with the extra week added to the first  quarter,
and fiscal year 2002 will be a 52-week  year.  For  presentation  purposes,  the
unaudited  condensed  consolidated  financial  statements and notes refer to the
calendar month end.

    On June 6, 2002 (the "closing date"),  the Company completed its merger with
Avant!  Corporation  (Avant!),  a company that develops,  markets,  licenses and
supports  electronic  design  automation  software  products  that assist design
engineers in the physical layout, design, verification,  simulation,  timing and
analysis  of  advanced  integrated  circuits.  Under  the  terms  of the  merger
agreement between the Company and Avant!,  Avant!  merged with and into a wholly
owned  subsidiary  of Synopsys.  The merger is accounted  for under the purchase
method of  accounting.  The results of operations of Avant!  are included in the
accompanying condensed consolidated financial statements for the period from the
closing date through July 31, 2002.

    The  unaudited  condensed  consolidated  financial  statements  include  the
accounts  of  Synopsys  and  its  wholly  owned  subsidiaries.  All  significant
intercompany  accounts and transactions have been eliminated.  In the opinion of
management,   all  adjustments  (consisting  of  normal  recurring  adjustments)
necessary  for a fair  presentation  of the  financial  position  and results of
operations  of the  Company  have been made.  Operating  results for the interim
periods are not  necessarily  indicative of the results that may be expected for
any future period or the full fiscal year. The unaudited condensed  consolidated
financial  statements  and notes  included  herein should be read in conjunction
with the consolidated financial statements and notes thereto for the fiscal year
ended  October 31, 2001  included in the  Company's  2001 Annual  Report on Form
10-K.

    The  preparation  of  financial  statements  in  conformity  with  generally
accepted  accounting  principles  requires  management  to  make  estimates  and
assumptions  that  affect  the  amounts  reported  in  the  unaudited  condensed
consolidated  financial statements and accompanying notes. A change in the facts
and circumstances  surrounding these estimates and assumptions could result in a
change to the estimates and assumptions and impact future operating results.

2.  SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

REVENUE RECOGNITION AND COST OF REVENUE

    Revenue  consists of fees for  perpetual  and  time-based  licenses  for the
Company's  software products,  sales of hardware system products,  post-contract
customer support (PCS), customer training and consulting. The Company classifies
its revenues as product,  service or ratable  license.  Product revenue consists
primarily of sales of perpetual licenses.

    Service revenue consists of fees for consulting services,  training, and PCS
associated with non-ratable  time-based licenses or perpetual licenses. PCS sold
with  perpetual  licenses is generally  renewable,  after any bundled PCS period
expires,  in one-year  increments  for a fixed  percentage of the perpetual list
price or, for  perpetual  license  arrangements  in excess of $2  million,  as a
percentage of the net license fee.

    Ratable license revenue is all fees related to time-based  licenses  bundled
with PCS and sold as a single package (commonly  referred to by the Company as a
Technology  Subscription  License or TSL), and time-based  licenses on which the
Company has granted  extended  payment  terms or under which the  customer has a
right to receive unspecified future products.

                                       6


    Cost of product  revenue  includes  cost of  production  personnel,  product
packaging,  documentation,  amortization  of  capitalized  software  development
costs,  and costs of the Company's  systems  products.  Cost of service  revenue
includes  personnel and the related costs  associated  with providing  training,
consulting  and  PCS.  Cost of  ratable  license  revenue  includes  the cost of
products and services  related to time-based  licenses bundled with PCS and sold
as a single  package and to time-based  licenses that include  extended  payment
terms or  unspecified  additional  products.  Cost of revenue also  includes the
amortization  of the contract  rights  intangible,  core technology and deferred
compensation.

    The Company recognizes revenue in accordance with SOP 97-2, SOFTWARE REVENUE
RECOGNITION,  as  amended  by SOP 98-9 and SOP 98-4,  and  generally  recognizes
revenue when all of the  following  criteria are met as set forth in paragraph 8
of SOP 97-2:

    o Persuasive evidence of an arrangement  exists,
    o Delivery has occurred,
    o The vendor's fee is fixed or determinable, and
    o Collectibility is probable.

    The Company defines each of the four criteria above as follows:

    PERSUASIVE  EVIDENCE OF AN ARRANGEMENT EXISTS. It is the Company's customary
    practice to have a written  contract,  which is signed by both the  customer
    and Synopsys,  or a purchase order from those customers that have previously
    negotiated  a  standard  end-user  license  arrangement  or volume  purchase
    agreement, prior to recognizing revenue on an arrangement.

    DELIVERY HAS OCCURRED.  The Company's  software may be either  physically or
    electronically  delivered  to its  customers.  For those  products  that are
    delivered physically, the Company's standard transfer terms are FOB shipping
    point.  For an  electronic  delivery of software,  delivery is considered to
    have occurred when the customer has been provided with the access codes that
    allow the  customer  to take  immediate  possession  of the  software on its
    hardware.

    If an  arrangement  includes  undelivered  products  or  services  that  are
    essential to the  functionality  of the delivered  product,  delivery is not
    considered to have occurred.

    THE VENDOR'S FEE IS FIXED OR DETERMINABLE.  The fee the Company's  customers
    pay for its products is negotiated at the outset of an  arrangement,  and is
    generally  based on the  specific  volume of products to be  delivered.  The
    Company's  license  fees are not a function of  variable-pricing  mechanisms
    such as the number of units  distributed  or copied by the customer,  or the
    expected number of users in an arrangement. Therefore, except in cases where
    the  Company  grants  extended  payment  terms to a specific  customer,  the
    Company's fees are considered to be fixed or  determinable  at the inception
    of its arrangements.

    The Company's  customary payment terms are such that a minimum of 75% of the
    arrangement  fee is due within one year or less.  Arrangements  with payment
    terms extending beyond the customary  payment terms are considered not to be
    fixed or determinable.  Revenue from such  arrangements is recognized at the
    lesser of the  aggregate  of  amounts  due and  payable or the amount of the
    arrangement  fee that would have been  recognized if the fees had been fixed
    or determinable.

    COLLECTIBILITY    IS   PROBABLE.    Collectibility    is   assessed   on   a
    customer-by-customer  basis.  The Company  typically  sells to customers for
    which  there is a  history  of  successful  collection.  New  customers  are
    subjected  to a  credit  review  process,  which  evaluates  the  customers'
    financial positions and, ultimately, their ability to pay. New customers are
    typically  assigned a credit  limit  based on a  formulated  review of their
    financial position. Such credit limits are only increased after a successful
    collection  history  with  the  customer  has  been  established.  If  it is
    determined  from the outset of an  arrangement  that  collectibility  is not
    probable  based  upon  the  Company's  credit  review  process,  revenue  is
    recognized on a cash-collected basis.

    MULTIPLE-ELEMENT  ARRANGEMENTS.  The Company  allocates  revenue on software
arrangements  involving  multiple elements to each element based on the relative
fair values of the elements.  The Company's  determination of fair value of each
element in multiple-element  arrangements is based on vendor-specific  objective
evidence  (VSOE).  The Company limits its assessment of VSOE for each element to
the price charged when the same element is sold separately.


                                       7


    The   Company   has   analyzed   all  of  the   elements   included  in  its
multiple-element  arrangements  and determined  that it has  sufficient  VSOE to
allocate  revenue to the PCS  components of its perpetual  license  products and
consulting.  Accordingly,  assuming all other revenue  recognition  criteria are
met,  revenue from  perpetual  licenses is recognized  upon  delivery  using the
residual  method in accordance with SOP 98-9, and revenue from PCS is recognized
ratably  over the PCS term.  The Company  recognizes  revenue from TSLs over the
term of the ratable license period, as the license and PCS portions of a TSL are
bundled and not sold  separately.  Revenue from contracts with extended  payment
terms is  recognized  as the lesser of amounts  due and payable or the amount of
the  arrangement  fee that would have been  recognized  if the fee were fixed or
determinable.

    Certain  of  the  Company's   time-based  licenses  include  the  rights  to
unspecified  additional  products.  Revenue  from  contracts  with the rights to
unspecified additional software products is recognized ratably over the contract
term. The Company recognizes revenue from time-based  licenses that include both
unspecified additional software products and extended payment terms that are not
considered  to be fixed or  determinable  in an  amount  that is the  lesser  of
amounts due and payable or the ratable portion of the entire fee.

    CONSULTING  SERVICES.  The Company provides design  methodology  assistance,
specialized  services relating to  telecommunication  systems design and turnkey
design services.  The Company's  consulting services generally are not essential
to the functionality of the software.  The Company's software products are fully
functional  upon delivery and  implementation  does not require any  significant
modification  or  alteration.  The  Company's  services to its  customers  often
include  assistance with product adoption and integration and specialized design
methodology assistance. Customers typically purchase these professional services
to facilitate the adoption of the Company's technology and dedicate personnel to
participate  in the services  being  performed,  but they may also decide to use
their own  resources or appoint  other  professional  service  organizations  to
provide  these   services.   Software   products  are  billed   separately   and
independently  from  consulting  services,  which  are  generally  billed  on  a
time-and-materials or milestone-achieved basis. The Company generally recognizes
revenue from consulting services as the services are performed.

    Exceptions to the general rule above involve  arrangements where the Company
has  committed to  significantly  alter the features  and  functionality  of its
software or build complex  interfaces  necessary  for the Company's  software to
function in the customer's  environment.  These types of services are considered
to be essential to the  functionality  of the  software.  Accordingly,  contract
accounting  is applied to both the  software  and service  elements  included in
these arrangements.

NEW ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS

    In July  2001,  the  Financial  Accounting  Standards  Board  (FASB)  issued
Statements  of Financial  Accounting  Standards No. 141,  BUSINESS  COMBINATIONS
(SFAS 141), and No. 142,  GOODWILL AND OTHER INTANGIBLE  ASSETS (SFAS 142). SFAS
141 requires  that the purchase  method of  accounting  be used for all business
combinations  initiated  after June 30, 2001 and specifies  criteria  intangible
assets  acquired  in a  purchase  method  business  combination  must meet to be
recognized  apart from goodwill.  SFAS 142 requires that goodwill and intangible
assets  with  indefinite  useful  lives no longer be  amortized,  but instead be
tested for  impairment at least  annually in accordance  with the  provisions of
SFAS 142.

    The Company  adopted the provisions of SFAS 141 on July 1, 2001.  Under SFAS
141,  goodwill and intangible  assets with indefinite useful lives acquired in a
purchase business combination completed after June 30, 2001, but before SFAS 142
is  adopted,  will  not be  amortized  but will  continue  to be  evaluated  for
impairment in accordance with SFAS 121.  Goodwill and intangible assets acquired
in  business  combinations  completed  before  July 1, 2001 will  continue to be
amortized  and tested for  impairment  in  accordance  with  current  accounting
guidance until the date of adoption of SFAS 142.

    Upon adoption of SFAS 142, the Company must evaluate its existing intangible
assets and goodwill acquired in purchase business  combinations prior to July 1,
2001, and make any necessary  reclassifications in order to conform with the new
criteria in SFAS 141 for recognition apart from goodwill.  Upon adoption of SFAS
142,  the Company  will be required to reassess  the useful  lives and  residual
values of all intangible  assets acquired,  and make any necessary  amortization
period  adjustments.  The Company  will also be required  to test  goodwill  for
impairment  in accordance  with the  provisions of SFAS 142 within the six-month
period following  adoption.  Any impairment loss will be measured as of the date
of adoption and recognized  immediately as the cumulative  effect of a change in
accounting  principle.  Any  subsequent  impairment  losses  will be included in
operating activities.

    The Company  expects to adopt SFAS 142 on  November 1, 2002.  As of July 31,
2002,  unamortized goodwill of $23.1 million will continue to be amortized until
the  date  of  adoption  of  SFAS  142,  in  accordance   with  the  Statements.

                                       8


Amortization of goodwill and other intangible  assets for the nine-month  period
ended  July 31,  2002 is $12.1  million.  Goodwill  totaling  $344.9  relates to
acquisitions  subsequent  to July 1,  2001 and is  therefore  not  amortized  in
accordance  with SFAS 142. The Company does not have any intangible  assets with
an indefinite useful life. The Company is currently evaluating the impact of the
adoption of this statement on its financial position and results of operations.

    In July 2001, the FASB issued  Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards
No. 143,  ACCOUNTING  FOR ASSET  RETIREMENT  OBLIGATIONS  (SFAS  143).  SFAS 143
requires  that  asset  retirement   obligations   that  are  identifiable   upon
acquisition,  construction  or  development  and during the operating  life of a
long-lived  asset be  recorded as a  liability  using the  present  value of the
estimated cash flows. A corresponding amount would be capitalized as part of the
asset's  carrying  amount and amortized to expense over the asset's useful life.
The Company is required to adopt the  provisions of SFAS 143 effective  November
1, 2002.  The  adoption  of SFAS 143 will not have a  significant  impact on the
Company's financial position and results of operations.

    In August 2001, the FASB issued Statement of Financial  Accounting Standards
No. 144,  ACCOUNTING FOR THE  IMPAIRMENT OR DISPOSAL OF LONG-LIVED  ASSETS (SFAS
144), which addresses  financial  accounting and reporting for the impairment or
disposal of long-lived  assets and supersedes  SFAS No. 121,  ACCOUNTING FOR THE
IMPAIRMENT OF LONG-LIVED ASSETS AND FOR LONG-LIVED ASSETS TO BE DISPOSED OF, and
the  accounting  and reporting  provisions of APB Opinion No. 30,  REPORTING THE
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS FOR A DISPOSAL OF A SEGMENT OF A BUSINESS.  The Company is
required to adopt the provisions of SFAS 144 no later than November 1, 2002. The
Company  does not expect that the  adoption of SFAS 144 will have a  significant
impact on its financial position and results of operations.

    In April 2002, the FASB issued Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards
No. 145,  RESCISSION  OF FASB  STATEMENTS  NO. 4, 44, AND 64,  AMENDMENT OF FASB
STATEMENT NO. 13, AND TECHNICAL  CORRECTIONS (SFAS 145). SFAS 145 eliminates the
requirement that gains and losses from the extinguishments of debt be aggregated
and, if material, classified as an extraordinary item, net of the related income
tax effect.  However,  an entity would not be prohibited from  classifying  such
gains and  losses as  extraordinary  items so long as they are both  unusual  in
nature and  infrequent  in  occurrence.  The  Company is  required  to adopt the
provisions of SFAS 145 effective November 1, 2002. SFAS 145 also amends SFAS 13,
ACCOUNTING  FOR LEASES and certain other  authoritative  pronouncements  to make
technical  corrections or  clarifications.  SFAS 145 is effective related to the
amendment of SFAS 13 for all  transactions  occurring  after May 15,  2002.  The
Company  does not expect that the  adoption of SFAS 145 will have a  significant
impact on its financial position and results of operations.

    In July 2002, the FASB issued  Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards
No.  146  (SFAS  146),  ACCOUNTING  FOR EXIT OR  DISPOSAL  ACTIVITIES.  SFAS 146
addresses  the  recognition,  measurement,  and  reporting  of  costs  that  are
associated  with  exit and  disposal  activities,  including  costs  related  to
terminating a contract that is not a capital lease and termination benefits that
employees who are involuntarily terminated receive under the terms of a one-time
benefit  arrangement that is not an ongoing benefit arrangement or an individual
deferred-compensation  contract.  SFAS 146 supersedes Emerging Issues Task Force
Issue No. 94-3, LIABILITY  RECOGNITION FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEE TERMINATION BENEFITS
AND OTHER  COSTS TO EXIT AN  ACTIVITY  (INCLUDING  CERTAIN  COSTS  INCURRED IN A
RESTRUCTURING)  and  requires  liabilities  associated  with  exit and  disposal
activities  to be expensed as incurred.  SFAS 146 will be effective  for exit or
disposal  activities of the Company that are initiated  after December 31, 2002.
The  Company is  evaluating  the effect of  adopting  SFAS 146 on its  financial
position and results of operations.

RECLASSIFICATION

    Certain prior year amounts have been reclassified to conform to current year
presentation.

3.   ACQUISITION OF AVANT! CORPORATION

     On June 6, 2002 (the "closing date"), the Company completed the merger with
Avant! Corporation (Avant!).

     REASONS FOR THE ACQUISITION.  The Company's Board of Directors  unanimously
approved the Company's  merger with Avant!  at its December 1, 2001 meeting.  In
approving the merger agreement,  the Board of Directors consulted with legal and
financial  advisors  as well as with  management  and  considered  a  number  of
factors.  Management  is  willing  to pay a premium  over the fair  value of the
tangible and identifiable  intangible assets as the merger is expected to enable
Synopsys to offer its  customers a complete  end-to-end  solution  for IC design
that  combines  Synopsys'  logic  synthesis and design  verification  tools with
Avant!'s  advanced place and route,  physical  verification and design integrity
products, thus increasing customers' design efficiencies. By increasing customer

                                       9


design efficiencies, Synopsys expects to be able to better compete for customers
designing the next generation of semiconductors.  Further,  by gaining access to
Avant!'s  physical  design  and  verification  products,  as well  as its  broad
customer base and relationships,  Synopsys will gain new opportunities to market
its existing products.  The foregoing  discussion of the information and factors
considered by the Company's  Board of Directors is not intended to be exhaustive
but includes the material factors considered by the Company's Board.

    PURCHASE PRICE.  Holders of Avant! common stock received 0.371 of a share of
Synopsys  common stock  (including  the  associated  preferred  stock rights) in
exchange  for each share of Avant!  common  stock owned as of the closing  date,
aggregating  14.5 million shares of Synopsys common stock. The fair value of the
Synopsys shares issued was based on a per share value of $54.74,  which is equal
to  Synopsys'  average  last  sale  price per share as  reported  on the  Nasdaq
National Market for the trading-day period two days before and after December 3,
2001, the date of the merger agreement.

    The total purchase consideration consists of the following:


                                                                               
          (IN THOUSANDS)
          Fair value of Synopsys common stock issued                               $    795,388
          Estimated acquisition related costs                                            37,342
          Estimated facilities closure costs                                             62,638
          Estimated employee severance costs                                             50,367
          Estimated fair value of options to purchase  Synopsys  common stock to
            be  issued,  less  $8.1  million  representing  the  portion  of the
            intrinsic  value of  Avant!'s  unvested  options  applicable  to the
            remaining vesting period                                                     63,033
                                                                                  -----------------
                                                                                   $  1,008,768
                                                                                  =================



    The estimated  acquisition-related  costs of $37.3 million consist primarily
of banking,  legal and  accounting  fees,  printing  costs,  and other  directly
related  charges  including  contract  termination  costs of $6.7  million.  The
Company is currently reviewing all outstanding Avant! contracts to determine the
additional  cost,  if any,  to exit  existing  contracts  which  may  result  in
additional  accruals for contract  termination costs in accordance with Emerging
Issues Task Force (EITF) Issue No. 95-3.  Any such accruals  would  increase the
purchase  consideration  and the  allocation  of the purchase  consideration  to
goodwill.

    Estimated  facilities  closure  costs  includes  $54.2  million  related  to
Avant!'s  corporate  headquarters.  The lessor has  brought a claim  against the
Company for the future amounts  payable under the lease  agreements.  The amount
accrued at the closing  date is equal to the future  amounts  payable  under the
related lease agreements,  without taking into  consideration in the accrual any
defenses we may have to the claim.  Resolution of this  contingency at an amount
different  from that  accrued  will  result in an  increase  or  decrease in the
purchase  consideration  and the amount  allocated  to goodwill.  The  remaining
estimated  facilities closure costs totaling $8.4 million represents the present
value of the future obligations under certain of Avant!'s lease agreements which
the Company has or intends to terminate  under an approved  facilities exit plan
plus additional costs expected to be incurred  directly related to vacating such
facilities.

    Estimated employee severance costs include (i) $39.6 million in cash paid to
Avant!'s  Chairman of the Board,  consisting  of  severance  plus a cash payment
equal to the intrinsic  value of his  in-the-money  stock options at the closing
date, (ii) $4.5 million in cash severance  payments paid to redundant  employees
(primarily  sales  and  corporate  infrastructure  personnel)  terminated  on or
subsequent  to  the  consummation  of the  merger  under  an  approved  plan  of
termination and (iii) $6.3 million in termination payments to certain executives
in accordance with their respective pre-merger employment agreements.  The total
number of Avant!  employees  expected to be terminated as a result of the merger
is approximately 250.



                                       10




    As of July 31, 2002, $73.3 million of costs described in the three preceding
paragraphs  have been paid and $77.1  million  of these  costs have not yet been
paid. The following table presents the components of  acquisition-related  costs
recorded, along with amounts paid through the third quarter of 2002.



                                                        Payments
                                        Total Cost       through        Balance at
(IN THOUSANDS)                                        July 31, 2002    July 31, 2002
                                        ------------ ---------------- ----------------
                                                             
Estimated acquisition related costs      $  37,342        $23,967          $13,375
Estimated facilities closure costs          62,638            262           62,376
Estimated employee severance costs          50,367         49,031            1,336
                                        ------------ ---------------- ----------------
Total                                     $150,347        $73,260          $77,087
                                        ============ ================ ================



    The total purchase  consideration  has been allocated on a preliminary basis
to the  assets  and  liabilities  acquired,  including  identifiable  intangible
assets,  based on  their  respective  fair  value  at the  acquisition  date and
resulted in excess purchase consideration over the net tangible and identifiable
intangible assets acquired of $344.9 million.  The following unaudited condensed
balance  sheet  data  presents  the  preliminary  fair  value of the  assets and
liabilities acquired and recorded at June 6, 2002.

(IN THOUSANDS)
Assets acquired
   Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments         $   241,313
   Accounts receivable                                            67,154
   Prepaid expenses and other current assets                      19,483
   Assets held for sale                                           33,220
   Intangible assets                                             365,000
   Goodwill                                                      344,949
   Other assets                                                    3,876
                                                           ----------------
     Total assets acquired                                   $ 1,074,995
                                                           ================

Liabilities acquired
   Accounts payable and accrued liabilities                  $   172,528
   Deferred revenue                                               30,080
   Income taxes payable                                           94,576
   Other liabilities                                               4,651
                                                           ----------------
      Total liabilities acquired                             $   301,835
                                                           ================

    Other current assets  acquired  includes an investment in a  venture-capital
fund valued at $12.8 million.  Management intends to dispose of this investment;
however,  the Company has been unable to obtain  certain  financial  records and
information required to effectively market the investment. The fair value of the
asset  recorded does not include any  adjustment of this  investment due to this
contingency.  Any  adjustment  to the  fair-value  of this  investment  which is
ultimately  made will  increase or decrease the purchase  consideration  and the
allocation of the purchase consideration to goodwill.




                                       11




     UNAUDITED PRO FORMA RESULTS OF OPERATIONS. The following table presents pro
forma  results of operations  and gives effect to the proposed  merger as if the
merger had been consummated on November 1, 2000. The unaudited pro forma results
of operations  are not  necessarily  indicative of the results of operations had
the  acquisition  actually  occurred at the beginning of fiscal 2001,  nor is it
necessarily indicative of future operating results:




                                                         THREE MONTHS ENDED          NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                              JULY 31,                    JULY 31,
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)                   2002           2001          2002         2001
                                                    -------------- -------------- ------------ ------------
                                                                                   
Revenues                                            $ 278,217       $ 276,922     $ 861,822     $ 789,308
Net income (loss)                                      16,099          18,434        71,697      (188,593)
Basic earnings (loss) per share                     $    0.23       $    0.25     $    1.12     $   (2.50)
Weighted average common shares outstanding             71,157          74,578        64,157        75,580
Diluted earnings (loss) per share                   $    0.21       $    0.23     $    1.04    $    (2.50)
Weighted  average common shares and dilutive stock
   options outstanding                                 74,955          80,351        68,698        75,580



     The  unaudited  pro forma  results of  operations  for each of the  periods
presented  exclude  non-recurring  merger  costs of $95,000  and $82,500 for the
contingently  refundable  insurance  policy and IPRD recorded by Synopsys in the
third  quarter of 2002 and  included in the  historical  condensed  consolidated
statement of operations.

    GOODWILL AND INTANGIBLE  ASSETS.  Goodwill,  representing  the excess of the
purchase  price  over the fair value of  tangible  and  identifiable  intangible
assets acquired in the merger will not be amortized consistent with the guidance
with SFAS 142.  The  goodwill  associated  with the  Avant!  acquisition  is not
deductible  for tax purposes.  In addition,  a portion of the purchase price was
allocated to the following identifiable intangible assets:

 Intangible Asset                      (IN THOUSANDS)   Estimated Useful Life
------------------------------------- ----------------- ------------------------
 Core/developed technology                $184,000      3 years
 Contract rights intangible                 51,700      3 years
 Customer installed base/relationship      102,500      6 years
 Trademarks and tradenames                  17,700      3 years
 Covenants not to compete                    9,100      The life of the related
                                                        agreement (2 to 4 years)
                                       ----------------
 Total                                    $365,000
                                       ================

     CONTRACT RIGHTS INTANGIBLE.  Avant! had executed signed license agreements,
had delivered the initial  configuration of licensed  technologies under ratable
license arrangements and had executed signed contracts to provide PCS over a one
to three year period, for which Avant! did not consider the fees to be fixed and
determinable  at the outset of the  arrangement.  There were no  receivables  or
deferred revenues recorded on Avant!'s  historical  financial  statements at the
closing date as the related  payments  were not yet due under  extended  payment
terms and deliveries  are scheduled to occur over the term of the  arrangements.
These ratable licenses and PCS arrangements  require future  performance by both
parties  and,  as such,  represent  executory  contracts.  The  contract  rights
intangible  asset  associated  with these  arrangements  is amortized to cost of
revenues over the related contract lives.

     The amortization of intangible  assets,  with the exception of the contract
rights intangible and the  core/developed  technology,  is included in operating
expenses in the statement of operations  for the three- and  nine-month  periods
ended July 31, 2002. Amortization of the core/developed  technology and contract
rights intangible is included in cost of revenue.

     ASSET  HELD FOR SALE.  In  January  2001,  Synopsys  sold the assets of its
silicon libraries business to Artisan Components,  Inc.  ("Artisan") and entered
into an  agreement  not to  engage,  directly  or  indirectly,  in the  physical
libraries  business  before  January 3, 2003.  Synopsys  also  agreed that if it
acquired a physical  libraries  business as part of a larger  acquisition,  then
Artisan  would have certain  preferential  rights to negotiate  and bid for such
business.  Prior  to  the  merger,  Avant!  engaged  in the  physical  libraries
business.  As a  result  of the  merger,  Synopsys  acquired  Avant!'s  physical
libraries business, and Synopsys is obligated to offer and sell such business to
Artisan under the terms of the January 2001  agreement.  The value  allocated to
the acquired  libraries business was recorded as net assets held for sale and is
based on the  estimated  future net cash flows from the  libraries  business  in
accordance  with EITF 87-11,  ALLOCATION OF PURCHASE PRICE TO ASSETS TO BE SOLD.
The  carrying  value  of  the  libraries   business  as  of  July  31,  2002  is
approximately  $33.1 million and losses for the period from June 6, 2002 through
July 31, 2002 that have been excluded  from the  consolidated  income  statement
were approximately $0.5 million.



                                       12


    CONTINGENTLY  REFUNDABLE INSURANCE POLICY.  Avant!, which upon completion of
the  Synopsys-Avant!  merger became a  wholly-owned  subsidiary of Synopsys is a
party  to a  number  of  material  civil  litigation  matters,  including  civil
litigation (the  Avant!/Cadence  litigation)  brought by Cadence Design Systems,
Inc.  (Cadence)  as discussed  in Footnote  12.  Synopsys  obtained an insurance
policy from a  subsidiary  of American  International  Group,  Inc., a AAA-rated
insurance  company,  whereby  insurance  was obtained for certain  compensatory,
exemplary and punitive damages,  penalties and fines and attorneys' fees arising
out of the Avant!/Cadence  litigation.  The policy does not provide coverage for
litigation other than the Avant!/Cadence litigation.

    The Company paid a total  premium of $335  million for the policy,  of which
$240  million  is  contingently  refundable.  Under the  policy  the  insurer is
obligated  to pay  covered  loss up to a limit of  liability  equaling  (a) $500
million  plus  (b)  interest  accruing  at the  fixed  rate  of  2%,  compounded
semi-annually,  on $250  million  (the  "interest  component"),  as  reduced  by
previous  covered losses.  The policy will expire  following a final judgment or
settlement of the  Avant!/Cadence  litigation or any earlier date upon Synopsys'
election. Upon such expiration,  Synopsys will be entitled to a payment equal to
$240 million plus the interest  component less any covered loss (which, for this
purpose,  shall include legal fees only to the extent that the aggregate  amount
of such fees exceeds $10 million).

    The contingently  refundable portion of the insurance premium ($240 million)
is included in the July 31, 2002 balance sheet as a long-term  restricted asset.
Interest  earned on $250  million will be included in other  income,  net in the
post-merger  statement  of  operations.  The balance of the premium  paid to the
insurer  ($95  million) is included  in  integration  expense for the three- and
nine-month periods ended July 31, 2002.

    At the closing date,  the  Avant!/Cadence  litigation was accounted for as a
pre-merger  contingency  because a litigation  judgment or settlement amount, if
any, is not probable or  estimable.  If a litigation  loss becomes  probable and
estimable, such loss will be included in net income.

    VALUATION  OF  IPRD.  The  amounts  allocated  to  purchased   research  and
development,   totaling  $82.5  million,  were  determined  through  established
valuation  techniques  in the  high-technology  industry and were  expensed upon
acquisition  because  technological  feasibility had not been established and no
future  alternative  uses existed.  Research and development  costs to bring the
products to technological  feasibility are expected to total approximately $17.5
million.

4.  STOCK REPURCHASE PROGRAM

    In July 2001, the Company's Board of Directors authorized a stock repurchase
program under which Synopsys common stock with a market value up to $500 million
may be acquired in the open market.  This stock repurchase  program replaced all
prior repurchase programs authorized by the Board. Common shares repurchased are
intended to be used for ongoing stock  issuances  under the  Company's  employee
stock plans, for acquisitions  and for other corporate  purposes.  The July 2001
stock repurchase program expires on October 31, 2002. During the three-month and
nine-month  periods ended July 31, 2001,  the Company  purchased 2.4 million and
6.6 million  shares,  respectively,  of Synopsys common stock in the open market
under a prior stock repurchase  program,  at average prices of $53 per share and
$50 per share,  respectively.  The Company repurchased 0.8 million shares during
the three-month  and nine-month  periods ended July 31, 2002 at an average price
of $50 per  share.  At July 31,  2002,  approximately  $440.1  million  remained
available for repurchases under the July 2001 program.

5.  COMPREHENSIVE (LOSS) INCOME

    The  following  table  sets forth the  components  of  comprehensive  (loss)
income, net of income tax expense:


                                                           THREE MONTHS ENDED                  NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                JULY 31,                           JULY 31,
                                                    ---------------------------------- ----------------------------------
                                                         2002              2001              2002             2001
                                                    ---------------- ----------------- ----------------- ----------------
                                                                               (IN THOUSANDS)
                                                                                            
      Net (loss) income                                $(137,589)       $  14,450         $ (102,157)       $   36,404
         Foreign currency translation adjustment          (4,672)            (936)            (4,218)           (3,763)
         Unrealized (loss) gain on investments           (10,720)           1,803             (4,016)           (1,863)
         Reclassification adjustment for realized
            gains on investments                              --           (7,967)            (5,842)          (25,566)
                                                    ---------------- ----------------- ----------------- ----------------
      Total comprehensive (loss) income                $(152,981)       $   7,350         $ (116,233)       $    5,212
                                                    ================ ================= ================= ================



                                       13



6.  EARNINGS PER SHARE

    Basic  earnings per share is computed using the  weighted-average  number of
common  shares  outstanding  during the period.  Diluted  earnings  per share is
computed  using  the  weighted-average  number  of common  shares  and  dilutive
employee  stock  options  outstanding  during the period.  The  weighted-average
dilutive stock options  outstanding is computed using the treasury stock method.
For the three- and  nine-month  periods ended July 31, 2002, due to the net loss
incurred  for  such   periods,   the  effect  of  employee   stock   options  is
anti-dilutive.

    The following is a reconciliation of the weighted-average common shares used
to calculate basic net earnings per share to the weighted-average  common shares
used to calculate diluted net income per share:



                                                              THREE MONTHS ENDED                NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                   JULY 31,                         JULY 31,
                                                        -------------------------------- --------------------------------
                                                             2002            2001             2002            2001
                                                        --------------- ---------------- --------------- ----------------
                                                                    (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE AMOUNTS)
                                                                                            
      NUMERATOR
          Net (loss) income                               $ (137,589)      $  14,450       $ (102,157)      $  36,404
                                                        =============== ================ =============== ================
      DENOMINATOR:
          Weighted-average common shares
             outstanding                                      71,157          60,048           64,157          61,050
          Effect of dilutive employee stock options                -           4,839                -           4,312
                                                        --------------- ---------------- --------------- ----------------
      Diluted common shares                                   71,157          64,887           64,157          65,362
                                                        =============== ================ =============== ================

      Basic (loss) earnings per share                     $    (1.93)      $    0.24       $    (1.59)      $    0.60
                                                        =============== ================ =============== ================
      Diluted (loss) earnings per share                   $    (1.93)      $    0.22       $    (1.59)      $    0.56
                                                        =============== ================ =============== ================



    The  effect  of  dilutive  employee  stock  options  excludes  approximately
7,445,643 and 3,577,000 stock options for the three-month periods ended July 31,
2002 and 2001,  respectively,  and 5,339,772  and  3,513,000 for the  nine-month
periods ended July 31, 2002 and 2001, respectively, which were anti-dilutive for
earnings per share calculations.

7.  SEGMENT DISCLOSURE

    Statement of  Financial  Accounting  Standards  No. 131,  DISCLOSURES  ABOUT
SEGMENTS  OF  AN  ENTERPRISE  AND  RELATED   INFORMATION  (SFAS  131),  requires
disclosures of certain information  regarding  operating segments,  products and
services,  geographic  areas of operation  and major  customers.  The method for
determining  what  information  to  report  under  SFAS  131 is  based  upon the
"management  approach,"  or the way  that  management  organizes  the  operating
segments within a Company for which separate financial  information is available
that is evaluated  regularly  by the Chief  Operating  Decision  Maker (CODM) in
deciding how to allocate resources and in assessing performance.  Synopsys' CODM
is the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Operating Officer.

    The Company provides comprehensive design technology products and consulting
services in the EDA software industry. The CODM evaluates the performance of the
Company  based on  profit  or loss  from  operations  before  income  taxes  not
including   integration   costs,   in-process   research  and   development  and
amortization  of  intangible  assets and deferred  stock  compensation.  For the
purpose of making operating  decisions,  the CODM primarily  considers financial
information  presented on a  consolidated  basis  accompanied  by  disaggregated
information  about  revenues  by  geographic  region.  There are no  differences
between the accounting  policies used to measure profit and loss for the Company
segment and those used on a consolidated  basis.  Revenue is defined as revenues
from external customers.





                                       14





    The disaggregated financial information reviewed by the CODM is as follows:



                                                           THREE MONTHS ENDED                NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                JULY 31,                          JULY 31,
                                                    --------------------------------- ---------------------------------
                                                         2002             2001             2002             2001
                                                    ---------------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------------
                                                                              (IN THOUSANDS)
                                                                                           
Revenue:
    Product                                            $   60,096       $   44,858       $  151,944       $  117,152
    Service                                                73,924           81,430          208,782          259,900
    Ratable license                                       102,075           49,822          236,552          119,736
                                                    ---------------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------------
    Total revenue                                      $  236,095       $  176,110       $  597,278       $  496,788
                                                    ================ ================ ================ ================
Gross margin before amortization of intangible
    assets and deferred stock compensation             $  201,775       $  143,390       $  493,376       $  401,056
Operating  income  (loss)  before  integration
    costs,  in-process  research and development
    and amortization of intangible assets and
    deferred stock compensation                        $   49,164       $    5,914       $   86,165       $     (851)



    There  were  no   integration,   in-process   research  and  development  or
amortization  of  deferred  stock  compensation  costs  during  the  three-  and
nine-month periods ended July 31, 2001.

    A  reconciliation  of the  Company's  segment  gross margin to the Company's
gross margin is as follows:



                                                           THREE MONTHS ENDED                NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                JULY 31,                          JULY 31,
                                                    --------------------------------- ---------------------------------
                                                         2002             2001             2002             2001
                                                    ---------------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------------
                                                                              (IN THOUSANDS)
                                                                                           
Gross margin before amortization of intangible
    assets and deferred stock compensation             $  201,775       $  143,390       $  493,376       $  401,056
Amortization of intangible assets and deferred
    stock compensation                                   (13,366)               --         (13,366)               --
                                                    ---------------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------------
Gross margin                                           $  188,409       $  143,390       $  480,010       $  401,056
                                                    ================ ================ ================ ================



     Reconciliation  of the Company's  segment  profit and loss to the Company's
operating  (loss)  income  before  (benefit)  provision  for income  taxes is as
follows:



                                                           THREE MONTHS ENDED                  NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                JULY 31,                           JULY 31,
                                                    ---------------------------------- ----------------------------------
                                                         2002              2001             2002              2001
                                                    ---------------- ----------------- ---------------- -----------------
                                                                               (IN THOUSANDS)
                                                                                            
Operating  income  (loss)  before  integration
  costs,  in-process  research and development
  and amortization of intangible assets and
  deferred stock compensation                         $   49,164         $  5,914         $   86,165       $     (851)
Integration costs                                       (117,266)              --           (117,266)              --
In-process research and development                      (82,500)              --            (82,500)              --
Amortization of intangible assets and deferred
  stock compensation                                     (22,186)          (4,163)           (30,586)         (12,514)
                                                    ---------------- ----------------- ---------------- -----------------
Operating (loss) income                               $ (172,788)        $  1,751         $ (144,187)      $  (13,365)
                                                    ================ ================= ================ =================






                                       15



    Revenue and long-lived assets related to operations in the United States and
other geographic areas are as follows:


                                    THREE MONTHS ENDED                 NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                         JULY 31,                          JULY 31,
                             --------------------------------- ----------------------------------
                                  2002             2001              2002             2001
                             ---------------- ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
                                                       (IN THOUSANDS)
                                                                     
Revenue:
    United States               $  154,501       $  110,770       $  390,529        $  306,650
    Europe                          34,992           33,460           98,584            91,214
    Japan                           25,758           18,405           59,783            53,060
    Other                           20,844           13,475           48,382            45,864
                             ---------------- ---------------- ----------------- ----------------
      Consolidated              $  236,095       $  176,110       $  597,278        $  496,788
                             ================ ================ ================= ================



                            JULY 31,       OCTOBER 31,
                              2002            2001
                        ---------------- ---------------
                                (IN THOUSANDS)
Long-lived assets:
    United States       $    160,270     $     176,330
    Other                     25,602            15,974
                        ---------------- ---------------
      Consolidated      $    185,872     $     192,304
                        ================ ===============

    Geographic revenue data for multi-region, multi-product transactions reflect
internal  allocations and is therefore subject to certain assumptions and to the
Company's  methodology.  Revenue is not reallocated among geographic  regions to
reflect any  re-mixing  of licenses  between  different  regions  following  the
initial product shipment.  One customer  accounted for approximately 15% and 10%
of the Company's  consolidated  revenue during the three- and nine-months  ended
July 31, 2002, respectively. No one customer accounted for more than ten percent
of the Company's  consolidated  revenue during the three- and nine-months  ended
July 31, 2001.

    The Company segregates revenue into five categories for purposes of internal
management  reporting:  Design  Implementation,  Verification  and Test,  Design
Analysis,  Intellectual Property (IP) and Professional  Services.  The following
table  summarizes the revenue  attributable  to each of the various  categories.
Revenue  attributable  to products  acquired from Avant!  that was recognized by
Avant!  prior to June 6, 2002 is not reflected in the following tables.  Revenue
attributable  to such  products  from  June 6,  2002  through  July 31,  2002 is
included in the three- and nine- months ended July 31, 2002.  As a result of the
Avant!  merger,  the Company has  redefined  its product  groups.  Prior  period
amounts have been reclassified to conform to the new presentation.



                                       THREE MONTHS ENDED                NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                            JULY 31,                         JULY 31,
                                 -------------------------------- --------------------------------
                                      2002            2001             2002             2001
                                 --------------- ---------------- ---------------- ---------------
                                                          (IN THOUSANDS)
                                                                       
Revenue

  Design Implementation            $   105,041     $    68,726      $   253,946      $   192,817
  Verification and Test                 62,216          59,037          191,471          161,301
  Design Analysis                       40,616          11,300           61,745           30,216
  IP                                    13,359          18,101           45,150           47,402
  Professional Services                 14,863          18,946           44,966           65,052
                                 --------------- ---------------- ---------------- ---------------
     Consolidated                  $   236,095     $   176,110      $   597,278      $   496,788
                                 =============== ================ ================ ===============



8.  DERIVATIVE FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

    Available-for-sale  equity  investments  accounted  for under  Statement  of
Financial  Accounting  Standards No. 115,  ACCOUNTING FOR CERTAIN INVESTMENTS IN
DEBT AND EQUITY  SECURITIES  (SFAS 115), are subject to market price risk.  From
time to time, the Company enters into and designates  forward contracts to hedge
variable cash flows from  anticipated  sales of these  investments.  The Company
recorded a net realized gain on the sale of the  available-for-sale  investments
including the settlement of forward contracts of $10.3 million and $13.1 million
(net of premium  amortization),  respectively,  during the  three-month  periods
ended July 31, 2002 and 2001 and $22.8 million and $41.9 million (net of premium


                                       16


amortization),  respectively,  during the nine-month periods ended July 31, 2002
and 2001.  As of July 31,  2002,  the  Company  has  recorded  $7.6  million  in
long-term    investments   due   to   locked-in    unrealized   gains   on   the
available-for-sale  investments. As of July 31, 2002, the maximum length of time
over which the Company is hedging its exposure to the variability in future cash
flows associated with the forward sale contracts is 6 months.

9.  TERMINATION OF AGREEMENT TO ACQUIRE IKOS SYSTEMS, INC.

    On July 2, 2001,  the Company  entered into an Agreement  and Plan of Merger
with IKOS Systems,  Inc. (IKOS).  The Agreement  provided for the acquisition of
all outstanding shares of IKOS common stock by Synopsys.

    On December 7, 2001, Mentor Graphics  Corporation  (Mentor) commenced a cash
tender  offer to acquire all of the  outstanding  shares of IKOS common stock at
$11.00 per share, subject to certain conditions. On March 12, 2002, Synopsys and
IKOS  executed a  termination  agreement  by which the  parties  terminated  the
Synopsys-IKOS merger agreement and pursuant to which IKOS paid Synopsys the $5.5
million termination fee required under the Synopsys-IKOS merger agreement.  This
termination  fee and $2.4 million of expenses  incurred in conjunction  with the
acquisition  are  included  in  other  income,  net on the  unaudited  condensed
consolidated  statement of income for the nine-month period ended July 31, 2002.
Synopsys  subsequently  executed a revised termination agreement with Mentor and
IKOS in order to add Mentor as a party thereto.

10. WORKFORCE REDUCTION

    In March 2002, the Company  implemented a workforce  reduction.  The purpose
was to reduce expenses by decreasing the number of employees in all departments,
both domestically and internationally.  As a result, the Company's workforce was
decreased by  approximately  175  employees and a charge of  approximately  $3.9
million is included in operating  expenses  during the  nine-month  period ended
July 31, 2002. This charge  consists of severance and other special  termination
benefits.

11. DEFERRED STOCK COMPENSATION

    In connection  with the Avant!  acquisition,  the Company  assumed  unvested
stock options held by former Avant! employees. The Company has recorded deferred
stock  compensation  totaling $8.1 million  based on the intrinsic  value of the
assumed  unvested stock options.  The deferred stock  compensation  is amortized
over the options'  remaining  vesting  period of one to three years.  During the
three- and nine-months  ended, July 31, 2002, the Company recorded  amortization
of deferred stock compensation in each of the following expense  classifications
on the statement of operations:

(IN THOUSANDS)
Cost of revenues                           $  58
Research and development                     309
Sales and marketing                          105
General and administrative                    38
                                           --------
Total                                       $510
                                           ========

12. CADENCE LITIGATION

     Avant! and its subsidiaries are engaged in the Avant!/Cadence litigation, a
material civil litigation matter. The Avant!/Cadence litigation generally arises
out of the same set of facts that were the subject of a criminal  action brought
against Avant! and several  individuals by the District  Attorney of Santa Clara
County,  California (the "Santa Clara criminal action").  Avant!, Gerald C. Hsu,
Chairman of Avant!  and five former Avant!  employees pled no contest to certain
of the charges in the Santa Clara criminal action.  As part of that plea, Avant!
paid  approximately  $35.3 million in fines and a hearing was held on the amount
of restitution  owed to Cadence.  During the hearing,  Cadence claimed losses of
$683.3  million.  Ultimately,  the  court in the  Santa  Clara  criminal  action
required Avant! to pay Cadence restitution in the amount of $195.4 million. That
amount has been fully paid.

     Cadence seeks  compensatory  damages and treble or other exemplary  damages
from  Avant!  in the  Avant!/Cadence  litigation  under  theories  of  copyright
infringement, misappropriation of trade secrets, inducing breach of contract and
false  advertising.  Synopsys  believes Avant!  has defenses to all of Cadence's
claims in the  Avant!/Cadence  litigation.  Cadence has not fully quantified the
amount of  damages it seeks in the  Avant!/Cadence  litigation.  Should  Cadence


                                       17


ultimately  succeed in the prosecution of its claims,  however,  Avant! could be
required to pay substantial  monetary  damages to Cadence.  Some or all of these
damages may be offset by the $195.4 million  restitution  paid to Cadence in the
Santa Clara criminal action.  Approximately  $500 million in additional  damages
would be covered by the insurance  policy  Synopsys has obtained with respect to
the Avant!/Cadence litigation.

     Injunctions  entered in 1997 and 1998 enjoined  Avant!  from  marketing its
early  place and route  products,  ArcCell  and  Aquarius,  based on a  judicial
determination  that they incorporated  portions of Cadence's Design Framework II
source code (DFII). The injunctions also prohibit Avant! from possessing, using,
selling  or  licensing  any  product  or work  copied or  derived  from DFII and
directly  or  indirectly  marketing,  selling  leasing,  licensing,  copying  or
transferring any of the ArcCell or Aquarius products.  Avant!  ceased marketing,
selling,  leasing,  licensing  or  supporting  all of the  ArcCell  or  Aquarius
products in 1996 and 1999,  respectively.  The DFII code is not  incorporated in
any  current  Avant!  product.  Although  Cadence  has not  made a claim  in the
Avant!/Cadence  litigation  against any current  Avant!  product,  including its
Apollo and Astro place and route  products,  and has not introduced any evidence
that any such product infringes Cadence's  intellectual property rights, Cadence
has publicly implied that it intends to assert such claims. Synopsys believes it
would  have  defenses  to  any  such  claims.  Nonetheless,  should  Cadence  be
successful at proving that any past or then-current Avant!  product incorporated
intellectual   property   misappropriated   from  Cadence,   Synopsys  could  be
permanently enjoined from further use of such intellectual property, which might
require  modification to existing products and/or suspension of the sale of such
products until such Cadence intellectual property was removed.

13.  SUBSEQUENT EVENT - ACQUISITION OF INSILICON CORPORATION

     On July 23, 2002,  Synopsys  entered  into an Agreement  and Plan of Merger
with inSilicon  Corporation  (inSilicon)  under which Synopsys  commenced a cash
tender offer to acquire all of the outstanding  shares of inSilicon common stock
at  $4.05  per  share  or  approximately  $64.9  million,   subject  to  certain
conditions. Following the consummation of the tender offer, inSilicon will merge
with and into a wholly owned  subsidiary of Synopsys.  Synopsys will account for
the merger under the  purchase  method of  accounting.  The merger is subject to
certain conditions,  including approval of the merger and the Agreement and Plan
of Merger by the inSilicon stockholders, compliance with regulatory requirements
and customary closing conditions.

14.  SUBSEQUENT EVENT - ACQUISITION OF CO-DESIGN

     On September 6, 2002,  Synopsys  acquired all of the outstanding  shares of
capital  stock of  Co-Design  Automation,  Inc.  (Co-Design)  for  consideration
consisting of cash and notes of $29.7  million and $4.8  million,  respectively,
and assumed options with an aggregate value of approximately  $1.3 million.  The
Company will account for the merger  under the  purchase  method of  accounting.
Synopsys  purchased  Co-Design  for a  number  of  reasons,  including  (i)  the
combination  of Co-Design's  technology  with  Synopsys'  verification  tools is
expected to speed the delivery of next-generation  hardware description language
solutions;  (ii) the  acquisition  will  help  promote  the use of the  Superlog
language,   which  Synopsys  believes  will  be  important  in  developing  next
generation  verification tools and increasing designer  productivity;  and (iii)
the acquisition gives Synopsys access to Co-Design's industry experts. As of the
date of  filing  this  Form  10-Q,  the  valuation  of  Co-Design's  assets  and
liabilities,  including  identifiable  intangible assets, as of the closing date
has not been completed.

ITEM 2. MANAGEMENT'S  DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS
OF OPERATIONS

    The following  discussion  contains  forward-looking  statements  within the
meaning  of  Section  21E  of  the  Securities   Exchange  Act  of  1934.   Such
forward-looking  statements  include  the  statements  concerning  the effect of
Technology  Subscription  Licenses on our revenue,  expectations for revenue and
costs of revenue, expectations about gains from the sale of investments, effects
of  foreign  currency  hedging,  adequacy  of our  cash as  well  as  statements
including the words "projects," "expects," "believes," "anticipates",  "will" or
similar   expressions.   Actual  results  could  differ  materially  from  those
anticipated in such  forward-looking  statements as a result of certain factors,
including those set forth under "Factors That May Affect Future Results."



                                       18





CRITICAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES

    The  discussion  and  analysis  of our  financial  condition  and results of
operations are based upon our consolidated financial statements, which have been
prepared in accordance  with  accounting  principles  generally  accepted in the
United States. The preparation of these financial statements requires management
to make  estimates  and  judgments  that affect the reported  amounts of assets,
liabilities,  revenues and expenses and related  disclosure of contingent assets
and  liabilities.  On an on-going  basis,  we evaluate our estimates,  including
those related to revenue recognition, bad debts, investments,  intangible assets
and income  taxes.  Our  estimates  are based on  historical  experience  and on
various other  assumptions  we believe are reasonable  under the  circumstances.
Actual results may differ from these estimates.

    The accounting  policies  described  below are the ones that most frequently
require us to make  estimates  and  judgments,  and are  therefore  critical  to
understanding our results of operations.

    REVENUE  RECOGNITION AND COST OF REVENUE.  Our revenue recognition policy is
detailed in Note 2 of the Notes to Unaudited  Condensed  Consolidated  Financial
Statements.  Management  has  made  significant  judgments  related  to  revenue
recognition; specifically, evaluating whether our fee relating to an arrangement
is fixed or determinable and assessing whether collectibility is probable. These
judgments are discussed below.

    THE VENDOR'S FEE IS FIXED OR DETERMINABLE. In order to recognize revenue, we
must make a judgment as to whether the arrangement fee is fixed or determinable.
Except in cases where we grant extended payment terms to a specific customer, we
have  determined that our fees are fixed or determinable at the inception of our
arrangements based on the following:

     o    The fee our customers pay for our products is negotiated at the outset
          of an  arrangement  and is generally  based on the specific  volume of
          products to be delivered.

     o    Our  license  fees are not a function of  variable-pricing  mechanisms
          such as the number of units  distributed  or copied by the customer or
          the expected number of users of the product delivered.

     Our  customary  payment  terms  are  such  that  a  minimum  of  75% of the
arrangement fee is due within one year or less.  These  customary  payment terms
are supported by historical  practice and  concessions  have not been granted to
customers under this policy.  Arrangements  with payment terms extending  beyond
the customary  payment  terms are  considered  not to be fixed or  determinable.
Revenue from such  arrangements  is recognized at the lesser of the aggregate of
amounts  due and  payable or the amount of the  arrangement  fee that would have
been recognized if the fees had been fixed or determinable.

     COLLECTIBILITY IS PROBABLE.  In order to recognize revenue,  we must make a
judgment of the  collectibility  of the  arrangement  fee.  Our  judgment of the
collectibility is applied on a customer-by-customer basis pursuant to our credit
review  policy.  We typically  sell to customers for which there is a history of
successful  collection.  New customers are subjected to a credit review process,
which  evaluates  the  customers'  financial  positions  and ability to pay. New
customers are typically  assigned a credit limit based on a formulated review of
their  financial  position.  Such  credit  limits  are  only  increased  after a
successful  collection history with the customer has been established.  If it is
determined from the outset of an arrangement that collectibility is not probable
based upon our credit review process,  revenue is recognized on a cash-collected
basis.

     VALUATION OF STRATEGIC INVESTMENTS.  As of July 31, 2002, the adjusted cost
of our strategic investments totaled $41.4 million. We review our investments in
non-public  companies and estimate the amount of any impairment  incurred during
the current period based on specific  analysis of each  investment,  considering
the  activities  of and events  occurring  at each of the  underlying  portfolio
companies during the quarter. Our portfolio companies operate in industries that
are rapidly  evolving  and  extremely  competitive.  For equity  investments  in
non-public companies where there is not a market in which their value is readily
determinable,  we assess each  investment  for  indicators of impairment at each
quarter end based  primarily on  achievement  of business  plan  objectives  and
current market conditions,  among other factors, and information available to us
at the time of this quarterly  assessment.  The primary business plan objectives
we consider include,  among others, those related to financial  performance such
as achievement  of planned  financial  results or completion of capital  raising
activities,  and those that are not  primarily  financial  in nature such as the
launching of technology or the hiring of key employees. If it is determined that
an impairment has occurred with respect to an investment in a portfolio company,
in the absence of  quantitative  valuation  metrics,  management  estimates  the
impairment and/or the net realizable value of the portfolio investment based on

                                       19


public-  and  private-company   market  comparable  information  and  valuations
completed  for  companies  similar to our portfolio  companies.  Future  adverse
changes in market conditions,  poor operating results of underlying  investments
and other  information  obtained after our quarterly  assessment could result in
losses or an inability to recover the current  carrying value of the investments
thereby possibly  requiring an impairment  charge in the future.  Based on these
measurements,  an impairment  loss of $4.0 million and $7.5 million was recorded
during the three- and nine-month periods ended July 31, 2002.

VALUATION  OF  INTANGIBLE   ASSETS.   Intangible   assets,  net  of  accumulated
amortization,  totaled  $351.2  million  as of July 31,  2002.  We  periodically
evaluate our intangible assets for indications of impairment  whenever events or
changes  in   circumstances   indicate  that  the  carrying  value  may  not  be
recoverable.  Intangible  assets  include  goodwill,  purchased  technology  and
capitalized  software.  Factors we consider  important  which  could  trigger an
impairment  review include  significant  under-performance  relative to expected
historical or projected future  operating  results,  significant  changes in the
manner  of our use of the  acquired  assets  or the  strategy  for  our  overall
business or significant negative industry or economic trends. If this evaluation
indicates that the value of the intangible asset may be impaired,  an evaluation
of the  recoverability of the net carrying value of the asset over its remaining
useful life is made. If this evaluation  indicates that the intangible  asset is
not recoverable,  based on the estimated  undiscounted  future cash flows of the
entity or technology  acquired over the remaining  amortization  period, the net
carrying value of the related intangible asset will be reduced to fair value and
the remaining  amortization  period may be adjusted.  Any such impairment charge
could be  significant  and could have a material  adverse effect on our reported
financial  statements  if and  when an  impairment  charge  is  recorded.  If an
impairment charge is recognized,  the amortization related to goodwill and other
intangible  assets would  decrease  during the  remainder of the fiscal year. No
impairment  losses  were  recorded  during the  current  quarter  based on these
measurements.

     ALLOWANCE  FOR DOUBTFUL  ACCOUNTS.  As of July 31, 2002,  the allowance for
doubtful accounts totaled $23.0 million. Management estimates the collectibility
of our accounts receivable on an account-by-account basis. We record an increase
in the  allowance  for  doubtful  accounts  when the  prospect of  collecting  a
specific account  receivable  becomes  doubtful.  In addition,  we provide for a
general reserve on all accounts receivable,  using a specified percentage of the
outstanding  balance  in  each  aged  group.  Management  specifically  analyzes
accounts    receivable   and   historical   bad   debt   experience,    customer
creditworthiness,  current  economic  trends,  international  exposures (such as
currency devaluation), and changes in our customer payment terms when evaluating
the adequacy of the allowance for doubtful accounts.  If the financial condition
of our  customers  were to  deteriorate,  resulting  in an  impairment  of their
ability to make payments, additional allowances may be required.

     INCOME TAXES.  Our effective tax rate is directly  affected by the relative
proportions of domestic and  international  revenue and income before taxes.  We
are also subject to changing tax laws in the multiple  jurisdictions in which we
operate. As of July 31, 2002, deferred tax assets and liabilities totaled $169.2
million and $23.3 million,  respectively. We believe that it is more likely than
not that the  results of future  operations  will  generate  sufficient  taxable
income to utilize these net deferred tax assets. While we have considered future
taxable  income and ongoing  prudent and  feasible tax  planning  strategies  in
assessing  the need for any  valuation  allowance,  should we determine  that we
would not be able to realize  all or part of our net  deferred  tax asset in the
future,  an  adjustment  to the deferred tax asset would be charged to income in
the period such determination was made.

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

    On June 6, 2002 (the "closing date"),  the Company completed the merger with
Avant!  Corporation  (Avant!), a company which develops,  markets,  licenses and
supports  electronic  design  automation  software  products  that assist design
engineers in the physical layout, design, verification,  simulation,  timing and
analysis  of  advanced  integrated  circuits.  Under  the  terms  of the  merger
agreement  between  the  Company  and  Avant!,  Avant!  merged  with  and into a
wholly-owned  subsidiary  of  Synopsys.  The merger is  accounted  for under the
purchase method of accounting.  The results of operations of Avant! are included
in the accompanying  condensed  consolidated financial statements for the period
from the closing date through July 31, 2002.

    REVENUE.  Revenue consists of fees for perpetual and ratable licenses of our
software  products,  sales of hardware system products,  post-contract  customer
support  (PCS),  customer  training  and  consulting.  We  classify  revenues as
product,  service or ratable  license.  Product  revenue  consists  primarily of
perpetual  license  product  revenue.  Service  revenue  consists  of PCS  under
perpetual  licenses  and fees for  consulting  services  and  training.  Ratable

                                       20


license  revenue  consists  of all  revenue  from  our  technology  subscription
licenses (TSLs) and from time-based  licenses sold prior to the adoption of TSLs
in August 2000 that include  extended  payment terms or  unspecified  additional
products.

     TSLs are  time-limited  rights  to use our  software.  Since  TSLs  include
bundled  product and  services,  both  product and service  revenue is generally
recognized  ratably  over the term of the  license,  or, if later,  as  payments
become due. The terms of TSLs,  and the payments due thereon,  may be structured
flexibly to meet the needs of the  customer.  In certain  situations,  customers
have limited  rights to new  technology  through  reconfiguration  clauses under
their agreements.

    We introduced  TSLs in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2000. The replacement of
the prior form of time-based  licenses by TSLs has impacted and will continue to
impact our  reported  revenue.  When a customer  buys a TSL,  relatively  little
revenue is recognized during the quarter the product is initially delivered. The
remaining  amount will  either be  recorded  as deferred  revenue on our balance
sheet or  considered  backlog by the  Company  and not  recorded  on the balance
sheet.  The amount  recorded as deferred  revenue is equal to the portion of the
license  fee that has been  invoiced  or paid  but not  recognized.  The  amount
considered  backlog moves out of backlog and is recorded as deferred  revenue as
invoiced or as  additional  payments  are made.  Deferred  revenue is reduced as
revenue is  recognized.  Under the prior  form of  time-based  licenses,  a high
proportion of all license revenue was recognized in the quarter that the product
was  delivered,  with  relatively  little  recorded  as  deferred  revenue or as
backlog.  Therefore,  an order  for a TSL will  result  in  significantly  lower
current-period  revenue  than an  equal-sized  order  under  the  prior  form of
time-based licenses.

     Since  our  introduction  of  TSLs,  the  average  TSL  duration  has  been
approximately  3.25  years.  This means  that,  absent the  Avant!  merger,  the
transition  of our license  base to TSLs would  continue to impact our  reported
revenue  until at least the first quarter of fiscal year 2004.  This  transition
period  will be  extended  as a  result  of our  merger  with  Avant!.  Avant!'s
historical license order mix had a higher proportion of perpetual licenses and a
lower  proportion of ratable  licenses than the Synopsys  license order mix from
August 2000 to the present  (i.e.,  since our adoption of TSLs),  which has been
22%  perpetual  licenses  and 78%  ratable  licenses.  We expect that the future
license order mix of the combined company will approach, over time, the Synopsys
license mix, though it is likely to fluctuate from quarter to quarter.

    We set  revenue  targets  for any  given  quarter  based,  in part,  upon an
assumption that we will achieve a certain license mix of perpetual  licenses and
TSLs.  The actual mix of licenses  sold  affects the revenue we recognize in the
period.  If we are unable to achieve our target license mix, we may not meet our
revenue  targets.  Our target license mix for total new software  license orders
for the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2002 is 20% to 25% perpetual  licenses and
75% to 80%  ratable  licenses.  For fiscal  year 2003,  our  preliminary  target
license  mix for  total new  software  license  orders  is 22% to 27%  perpetual
licenses and 73% to 78% ratable  licenses.  These ranges are preliminary and are
subject to revision  based on  developments  in our business.  In addition,  the
precise mix of orders is subject to substantial fluctuation in any given quarter
or multiple quarter period. In the third quarter of fiscal 2002, the license mix
was  approximately  32%  perpetual  licenses and 68% TSLs,  in comparison to 29%
perpetual licenses and 71% TSLs in the third quarter of fiscal 2001.

    As expected,  total revenue for the third  quarter of fiscal 2002  increased
34% to $236.1 million compared to $176.1 million for the third quarter of fiscal
2001.  Revenue for the nine months ended July 31, 2002  increased  20% to $597.3
million  compared to $496.8 million for the nine months ended July 31, 2001. The
increase in total  revenue  for the three- and nine  months  ended July 31, 2002
compared to the same periods in 2001 is due primarily to the Avant! acquisition,
and to the additional  quarters that the TSL license model has been used and the
related increase in revenue due to the timing of revenue  recognition under this
model.

    Product  revenue  increased  34% to $60.1  million for the third  quarter of
fiscal 2002,  compared to $44.9 million for the third quarter of fiscal 2001 and
30% to $151.9 million for the nine months ended July 31, 2002 compared to $117.2
million for the same period in fiscal 2001.  The increase in product  revenue is
directly  related to the increase in orders for  perpetual  licenses  during the
periods, since, in most cases, product revenue is recognized in the same quarter
that an order for a perpetual license is received and to the increased volume as
a result of the  Avant!  merger.  During the  second  quarter of 2002,  we began
offering  variable  maintenance  arrangements to certain  customers that entered
into perpetual license technology  arrangements in excess of $2.0 million. Under
these arrangements,  the annual fee for PCS is calculated as a percentage of the
net license fee rather than a fixed percentage of the list price.

    Service  revenue  decreased  9% to $73.9  million  for the third  quarter of
fiscal 2002,  compared to $81.4  million for the third  quarters of fiscal 2001,
and  decreased  20% to $208.8  million for the nine  months  ended July 31, 2002

                                       21


compared to $259.9  million for the same period in fiscal 2001. The decreases in
both  periods are due in part to  economic  factors and in part to the impact of
our adoption of TSLs on our overall  license mix.  Economic  conditions have led
our  customers  to  reduce  their  costs  by  curtailing  their  use of  outside
consultants  and, in some cases,  discontinuing  maintenance on their  perpetual
license.  As a result,  we received a lower volume of new consulting orders than
expected,  and  certain  projects in the  consulting  backlog  were  deferred or
cancelled.  Customer expenditures on training have also been reduced,  which has
reduced our revenue from training.  These conditions are expected to continue at
least until the semiconductor  industry recovers. The shift to TSLs has impacted
service  revenue in two ways.  First,  new licenses  structured  as TSLs include
bundled  PCS,  which means that revenue  attributable  to PCS is  recognized  as
ratable revenue. If such licenses were perpetual licenses or time-based licenses
similar  to the type that we used to offer,  the PCS  revenue  relating  to such
licenses would be recognized as service revenue. Second, customers with existing
perpetual  licenses are entering  into new TSLs rather than  renewing the PCS on
the existing perpetual licenses.  In each case, revenue attributable to PCS that
otherwise  would have been  reflected  in service  revenue is now  reflected  in
ratable license revenue.

    REVENUE EXPECTATIONS.  For the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2002, we expect
revenue to consist of 25% to 30% product revenue, 45% to 50% TSLs and 25% to 30%
services revenue. For the full fiscal year 2003, we expect revenue to consist of
15% to 20% product revenue, 50% to 55% TSLs and 25% to 30%services revenue.

    INTERNATIONAL  REVENUE.  The following table  summarizes the performance of
the various geographic regions as a percent of total Company revenue:

                             THREE MONTHS ENDED          NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                  JULY 31,                   JULY 31,
                          -------------------------- --------------------------
                             2002          2001          2002         2001
                          ------------ ------------- ------------- ------------
North America                   65%          63%           65%           62%
Europe                          15%          19%           17%           18%
Japan                           11%          10%           10%           11%
Asia Pacific and Other           9%           8%            8%            9%
                          ------------ ------------- ------------- ------------
Total                          100%         100%          100%          100%
                          ============ ============= ============= ============

    International revenue as a percentage of total revenue for the quarter ended
July 31, 2002  decreased to 35% from 37% for the quarter ended July 31, 2001 and
to 35%  from 38% for the  nine-month  periods  ended  July  31,  2002 and  2001,
respectively.  In any given period,  the geographic mix of revenue is influenced
by the  particular  contracts  signed during the quarter and in prior  quarters.
International  sales  are  vulnerable  to  regional  or  worldwide  economic  or
political conditions.  In particular, a number of our largest European customers
are  in  the   telecommunications   equipment   business,   which  has  weakened
considerably,  resulting  in a quarterly  decline in  revenues  from Europe as a
percentage of total  Company  revenue  during  fiscal 2002.  The majority of our
international  sales are denominated in the U.S.  dollar.  There were no foreign
exchange gains or losses that were material to our financial  results during the
three- and nine-month periods ended July 31, 2002 and 2001.

    REVENUE - PRODUCT GROUPS. For management  reporting  purposes,  our products
have been organized into four distinct product groups -- Design  Implementation,
Verification  and Test,  Design  Analysis,  Intellectual  Property (IP) -- and a
services group --  Professional  Services.  The following  table  summarizes the
revenue  attributable  to the various  groups as a percentage  of total  Company
revenue for the last eight quarters.  Revenue  attributable to products acquired
from Avant! that was recognized by Avant! prior to June 4, 2002 is not reflected
in the following tables. Revenue attributable to such products from June 6, 2002
through July 31, 2002 is included in the third quarter fiscal 2002 revenue. As a
result of the Avant!  merger, we have redefined our product groups. Prior period
amounts have been reclassified to conform to the new presentation.



                              Q3-2002       Q2-2002      Q1-2002      Q4-2001      Q3-2001      Q2-2001      Q1-2001     Q4-2000
                            ------------- ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------ -----------
                                                                                                
Revenue

  Design Implementation           45%           42%          40%          42%          39%          39%          38%          40%
  Verification and Test           26            34           37           33           34           32           31           30
  Design Analysis                 17             6            6            6            6            5            7            5
  IP                               6             9            9           10           10            9           10           11
  Professional Services            6             9            8            9           11           15           14           14
                            ------------- ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------ -----------
   Total Company                 100%          100%         100%         100%         100%         100%         100%         100%
                            ============= ============ ============ ============ ============ ============ ============ ===========


                                       22



    DESIGN IMPLEMENTATION.  Design Implementation includes products used for the
design  of a  chip  from a  high  level  functional  description  to a  complete
description of the  transistors and wires that implement such functions that can
be delivered  to a  semiconductor  company for  manufacturing  (a process  often
referred to as "RTL to GDSII"),  including synthesis,  physical synthesis, floor
planning and place-and-route  products and technologies.  The principal products
in this category are Design Compiler,  FPGA Compiler,  Physical  Compiler,  Chip
Architect,  Floorplan  Compiler,  Jupiter,  Apollo,  Astro and related products.
Design Implementation,  as a percent of revenue,  fluctuated between 38% and 42%
in the period from the fourth  quarter of fiscal 2000 through the second quarter
of fiscal  2002,  and  exhibited  a  generally  increasing  trend from the first
quarter of fiscal 2001  through the second  quarter of fiscal  2002.  This trend
reflects  the  Company's  growing  portfolio of Design  Implementation  products
during the period,  most notably the introduction of Physical Compiler,  and the
growing importance of design implementation products in solving customers design
problems.  The 3% increase  from the second  quarter of fiscal 2002 to the third
quarter of fiscal 2002 is due principally to the addition of Avant!  products to
this category,  since the largest  portion of Avant!'s  revenue was derived from
products  (including its principal  place and route products) that were added to
the Design Implementation category.

    VERIFICATION  AND TEST.  Verification  and Test  includes  products used for
verification and analysis performed at the system level, register transfer level
(RTL) and gate level of design,  including  simulation,  system level design and
verification,  timing analysis, formal verification,  test and related products.
The  principal  products in this  category  are VCS,  Polaris,  Vera,  PathMill,
CoCentric System Studio, PrimeTime, Formality, Design Verifyer, DFT Compiler and
TetraMax.  As a percent of revenue,  revenue from this product family fluctuated
between 30% and 34% in the period from the fourth quarter of fiscal 2000 through
the  second  quarter  of fiscal  2002,  principally  attributable  to the mix of
perpetual  versus  time-based  license orders received for Verification and Test
products  during  any  given  quarter.  Revenue  as a percent  of total  revenue
increased through the second quarter of fiscal 2002 as a result of the quarterly
amortization of deferred revenue related to the ratable license model.  From the
second quarter of fiscal 2002 to the third quarter of fiscal 2002,  Verification
and Test revenues as a percent of total Company revenue  decreased,  principally
because the  Verification  and Test product group does not include many products
acquired from Avant!. In terms of absolute  dollars,  revenues from this product
group remained relatively flat.

    DESIGN ANALYSIS. Design Analysis includes products used for verification and
analysis  performed  at the  transistor  level  and  physical  level of  design,
including  analog and mixed signal  circuit  simulation,  design rule  checking,
power analysis, customer design,  semiconductor process modeling and reliability
analysis. The principal products in this category are NanoSim,  StarSim, HSPICE,
StarRC, Arcadia, TCAD, Hercules, Venus, OPC, PrimePower and Cosmos. Revenue from
this product group as a percentage of total  revenues has ranged  between 5% and
7% since the  introduction  of TSLs as a result of the mix of  perpetual  versus
time-based license orders received during a particular quarter. During the third
quarter of fiscal 2002, revenue from this product group as a percentage of total
revenues  increased to 17%,  due  primarily  to the Avant!  acquisition,  as the
second largest  portion of Avant!'s  revenue was derived from products that were
added to the Design Analysis category.

    INTELLECTUAL  PROPERTY.  Our IP products  include the DesignWare  library of
design components and verification models. Revenue as a percent of total revenue
decreased  from the fourth quarter of fiscal 2000 to the third quarter of fiscal
2002 from 11% to 6%, respectively, due in part to the fact that the term of many
of these  licenses  has  increased  from one to three  years and the  revenue is
recognized  over a longer period of time. From the second quarter of fiscal 2002
to the third  quarter of fiscal 2002,  IP revenues as a percent of total Company
revenue decreased principally because the IP product group does not include many
products acquired from Avant!

    PROFESSIONAL  SERVICES.  The Professional Services group includes consulting
and training  activities.  This group provides  consulting  services,  including
design methodology  assistance,  specialized  telecommunications  systems design
services and turnkey design.  Revenue from professional services as a percentage
of total  revenues has declined from 14% in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2000 to
6% in the third  quarter of fiscal 2002,  reflecting,  as described  above under
"Revenue", the impact of the economic environment.

    COST OF REVENUE.  Cost of revenue  consists of the cost of product  revenue,
cost of service revenue and cost of ratable license revenue and  amortization of
intangible  assets and  deferred  stock  compensation.  Cost of product  revenue
includes  personnel and related  costs,  production  costs,  product  packaging,
documentation,  amortization  of  capitalized  software  development  costs  and
purchased  technology,  and  costs  of the  components  of our  hardware  system
products.  The cost of internally  developed  capitalized  software is amortized
based on the  greater  of the ratio of current  product  revenue to the total of
current and  anticipated  product revenue or the  straight-line  method over the

                                       23


software's  estimated  economic life of approximately two years. Cost of service
revenue  includes  consulting  services,  personnel and related costs associated
with providing training and PCS on perpetual  licenses.  Cost of ratable license
revenue  includes the costs of product and services  related to our TSLs,  since
TSLs include  bundled  product and services.  Cost of product  revenue,  cost of
service revenue and cost of ratable license revenue are heavily  dependent on an
on the mix of software orders received during the period.

    Cost of product  revenue  decreased to 7% of total  product  revenue for the
three  months  ended July 31, 2002  compared  to 14% for the same period  during
2001.  Cost of product revenue was 8% and 15% for the nine months ended July 31,
2002 and 2001,  respectively.  This  decrease  in cost of  product  revenue as a
percentage of total product revenue for the three- and nine-month  periods ended
July  31,  2002 as  compared  to 2001  is due in  part to the  wind-down  of our
internet  business unit during the third quarter of fiscal 2001,  and in part to
certain direct costs related to commitments  that were incurred during the third
quarter  of  fiscal  2001  resulting  from  the  sale of our  silicon  libraries
business.

    Cost of service revenue as a percentage of total service revenue was 27% and
24% for the third quarters of fiscal 2002 and 2001, respectively,  and increased
to 28% from 22% for the nine months ended July 31, 2002 and 2001,  respectively.
The increase in cost of service revenue as a percentage of total service revenue
is due  primarily  to the  decline in total  service  revenue  and to  decreased
utilization  of our  professional  services  personnel,  both as a result of the
economic environment.

    Cost of ratable  license revenue was 10% in the third quarter of fiscal 2002
compared  to 15% for the third  quarter of 2001 and was 15% and 16% for the nine
months ended July 31, 2002 and 2001,  respectively.  The cost of ratable license
revenue as a percent of ratable revenue is impacted by the mix of orders between
product, service and ratable revenue during the particular quarter as well as an
increase in quarterly  amortization of deferred revenue and backlog, which is an
inherent result of the use of the ratable license model.

     Amortization of intangible assets and deferred stock compensation  includes
the amortization of the contract rights intangible asset associated with certain
executory  contracts,  as discussed under  "ACQUISITION  OF AVANT!  CORPORATION"
below, and the amortization of core/developed  technology acquired in the Avant!
merger.  Total  amortization  of these  intangible  assets  for the  three-  and
nine-month  periods  ended July 31,  2002 was $2.7  million  and $10.2  million,
respectively.  In  connection  with the Avant!  acquisition,  the  Company  also
assumed  unvested  stock  options  held by Avant!  employees.  The  Company  has
recorded  deferred  stock  compensation  totaling  $8.1  million  based  on  the
intrinsic  value of these assumed  unvested  stock  options.  The deferred stock
compensation is amortized over the options'  remaining  vesting period of one to
three years.  During the three- and nine-months ended July 31, 2002, we recorded
amortization  of deferred stock  compensation  in each of the following  expense
classifications on the statement of operations:

(IN THOUSANDS)
Cost of revenues                           $  58
Research and development                     309
Sales and marketing                          105
General and administrative                    38
                                           --------
Total                                       $510

    COST REDUCTION PROGRAM.  During the first quarter of fiscal 2002, as part of
an overall cost reduction program, the Company implemented a workforce reduction
affecting all departments,  both domestically and internationally.  As a result,
the Company's  workforce was reduced by approximately 175 employees and a charge
of  approximately  $3.9 million was included in  operating  expenses  during the
second  quarter of fiscal  2002.  This charge  consists of  severance  and other
special  termination  benefits.  These costs are  reflected in the  statement of
operations as follows:

(IN THOUSANDS)
Cost of revenues                           $ 678
Research and development                   1,081
Sales and marketing                        1,078
General and administrative                 1,033
                                         -----------
Total                                      3,870
                                         ===========

    RESEARCH AND  DEVELOPMENT.  Research and development  expenses  increased to
$61.6 million  during the third quarter of fiscal 2002 compared to $49.4 million
for the  third  quarter  of  fiscal  2001.  Research  and  development  expenses
represented 26% and 28% of total revenue in the third fiscal quarter of 2002 and
2001,  respectively.  The increase in research and development expenses resulted
principally   from  the  increase  in  headcount  as  a  result  of  the  Avant!

                                       24


acquisition. The increased expenditures consist principally of increases of $8.8
million in compensation  expense,  $2.0 million in  depreciation  expense and of
$5.3 million in research and development-related human resources, technology and
facilities  costs.  These  increases  are offset by decreases of $1.9 million in
consulting  and  contractor  costs and $1.9  million  in other  costs  including
travel,  communications and supplies as a result of the Company's cost reduction
programs.

    Research and  development  expenses were $156.9  million for the  nine-month
period ended July 31, 2002 and $143.2  million for the  nine-month  period ended
July 31,  2001.  As a percentage  of total  revenue,  research  and  development
expenses  represented 26% and 29% for the nine-month periods ended July 31, 2002
and 2001, respectively.  The increase in terms of dollars is due to the increase
in  compensation  and  compensation-related  costs of $14.0  million  related to
higher  levels of research  and  development  staffing as a result of the Avant!
acquisition  and  annual  merit  and  cost  of  living  increases,   which  were
implemented in the second quarter of 2001.  Depreciation  expense also increased
$3.2 million and human  resources,  technology and facilities costs for research
and  development  increased $5.1 million as a result of the increase in research
and  development  staffing.  These increases are offset by decreases in expenses
related  to  consultants  and  other  expenses,  including  facilities,  travel,
communications,  supplies and recruiting,  which decreased $4.5 million and $3.5
million, respectively, as a result of our cost reduction programs.

    SALES AND MARKETING.  Sales and marketing expenses remained  relatively flat
at $69.1  million the third  quarter of fiscal 2002 compared to $69.0 million in
the same quarter last year. Sales and marketing expenses represented 29% and 39%
of total revenue in the third fiscal quarter of 2002 and 2001, respectively.  In
the  three-month  period in fiscal  2002  compared to fiscal  2001,  in terms of
dollars,  compensation and compensation-related costs increased $3.6 million due
to  the  Avant!  acquisition.  These  increases  were  offset  by  decreases  in
advertising expenses of $1.0 million due to the fact that the Company launched a
brand recognition program during the third quarter of fiscal 2001,  resulting in
additional  expenses  in 2001.  The  corporate  costs  allocated  to  sales  and
marketing  also  decreased  $2.5  million  as a result  of a  decrease  in human
resources,  technology and facilities  costs as a result of decreased  sales and
marketing headcount as a percentage of total headcount.

    Sales and marketing expenses were $192.1 million and $207.7 million (32% and
42% of total revenue) for the  nine-month  periods ended July 31, 2002 and 2001,
respectively. The decrease in the nine-month period in fiscal 2002 in comparison
to the fiscal  2001  period,  in terms of dollars,  resulted  from a decrease in
compensation and compensation-related  costs of $4.1 million due to a decline in
sales  commissions and a decrease in the cost of benefits related to a change in
our health and  welfare  benefit  programs.  These  decreases  were offset by an
increase in compensation  related to additional employees added during the third
quarter as a result of the Avant! acquisition.  Human resources,  technology and
facilities  costs also decreased $5.6 million as a result of a decrease in sales
and marketing headcount as a percentage of total headcount.  Employee functions,
consulting  expenses,  and  other  expenses  including  facilities,  travel  and
information  technology  also  decreased  $1.1  million,  $2.3  million and $2.1
million, respectively, as a result of the Company's cost reduction efforts.

    GENERAL AND  ADMINISTRATIVE.  General and administrative  expenses increased
14% to $21.9  million in the third  quarter of fiscal  2002,  compared  to $19.1
million in the same  quarter  last year.  General  and  administrative  expenses
represented 9% and 11% of total revenue for the  three-month  periods ended July
31, 2002 and 2001, respectively.  This increase is due in part to an increase in
litigation  expenses  relating  to  certain  legal  actions.   Compensation  and
compensation-related costs increased $2.2 million,  communications costs of $1.5
million and facilities  costs of $3.6 million due to the  acquisition of Avant!.
These increases were offset by decreases in consulting  costs of $2.6 million as
a result of the Company's cost reduction efforts and human resources, technology
and  facilities  costs  decreased  $6.2 million as a result of a decrease in the
percentage of general and administrative headcount.

    General and  administrative  expenses  increased  14% to $58.2  million from
$50.9  million for the nine months  ended July 31, 2002 and 2001,  respectively.
General and administrative  expenses represented 10% of total revenue in each of
the  nine-month  periods  ended July 31, 2002 and 2001.  This increase is due in
part to an increase in  litigation  expenses  relating to certain  legal actions
initiated by Synopsys. In addition,  compensation and compensation-related costs
increased  $2.3  million,  communications  costs  increased  $1.9  million,  and
facilities  costs increased $9.8 million as a result of the Avant!  acquisition.
These increases were offset by decreased  consulting  costs of $3.0 million as a
result of the Company's cost reduction  efforts and decreased  human  resources,
technology  and  facilities  costs of $13.0 million as a result of a decrease in
general and administrative headcount.

    AMORTIZATION  OF INTANGIBLE  ASSETS.  Goodwill  represents the excess of the
aggregate  purchase  price over the fair value of the tangible and  identifiable
intangible assets we have acquired. Intangible assets and goodwill are amortized
over  their  estimated  useful  lives of  three  to six  years.  We  assess  the

                                       25


recoverability  of goodwill by estimating  whether the unamortized  cost will be
recovered  through  estimated future  undiscounted  cash flows.  Amortization of
intangible  assets charged to operations in the third quarter of fiscal 2002 was
$8.8  million   compared  to  $4.2  million  for  the  same  period  last  year.
Amortization  of intangible  assets  charged to operations was $17.2 million and
$12.5  million for the nine months  ended July 31, 2002 and 2001,  respectively.
The increased amortization in the fiscal 2002 periods is due to the amortization
of intangible  assets acquired in the Avant!  merger.  The Financial  Accounting
Standards  Board recently  issued new guidance with respect to the  amortization
and evaluation of goodwill.  This new guidance is discussed  below under "Effect
of New Accounting Standards".

    OTHER INCOME,  NET. Other income, net was $11.4 million in the third quarter
of fiscal 2002  compared to $19.5 million in the same quarter in the prior year.
This decrease is due in part to the lower level of gains  recognized on the sale
of securities,  which were $10.3 million during the third quarter of fiscal 2002
compared to $13.1 million for the same period during 2001.  Interest  income for
the third  quarter of 2002 was $2.4  million  compared  to $2.7  million for the
third  quarter of 2001.  Although  cash balances were higher as of July 31, 2002
than a year ago,  significantly  lower interest rates and the Company's shift of
its investments into shorter maturity  instruments in anticipation of the Avant!
merger  resulted in a decrease in interest  income.  Rental  income in the third
quarter of fiscal 2002 and 2001 was $2.6 million and $2.5 million, respectively.
The third  quarter of fiscal  2002  includes  investment  impairment  charges of
approximately  $4.0 million to write down the carrying  value of certain  assets
held in our venture fund to the best estimate of net realizable value.

    Other  income,  net was $33.7  million and $66.9 million for the nine months
ended July 31, 2002 and 2001,  respectively.  The nine-month  decrease is due in
part to the gain of $10.6 million on the sale of our silicon libraries  business
to Artisan during 2001 and in part to realized gains on investments,  which were
$22.7  million for fiscal 2002 as  compared  to $43.1  million for fiscal  2001.
These gains were  partially  offset by the  write-down of certain  assets in our
venture  portfolio  in the amount of $7.5  million and $4.3 million for the nine
months of fiscal 2002 and 2001, respectively. Interest income in the nine months
ended July 31, 2002 was $6.9  million,  as compared to $10.5 million in the same
quarter last year. Although cash balances were higher as of July 31, 2002 than a
year ago, a  significantly  lower  interest  rate  environment  and a  shortened
average investment maturity in anticipation of the Avant!  acquisition  resulted
in a decrease  in  interest  income.  The nine  months  ended July 31, 2002 also
include  a gain of $3.1  million  related  to the  termination  fee for the IKOS
agreement,  net of costs incurred.  Further,  rental income was $7.5 million and
$6.2 for the nine-month periods ended July 31, 2002 and 2001, respectively.  The
remaining  changes to other income,  net relate to the  amortization  of premium
forwards and foreign exchange gains and losses  recognized during the nine-month
period.

    During the nine months  ended July 31,  2002 and 2001,  we  determined  that
certain of the assets held in our venture  fund valued at $9.5  million and $6.6
million,  respectively,  were  impaired and that the  impairment  was other than
temporary.  Accordingly,  we recorded charges of approximately  $7.5 million and
$4.3 million for the nine months ended July 31, 2002 and 2001, respectively,  to
write down the carrying  value of the  investments  to the best  estimate of net
realizable value. Impairment charges relate to certain investments in non-public
companies and represent  management's estimate of the impairment incurred during
the period as a result of specific analysis of each investment,  considering the
activities of and events occurring at each of the underlying portfolio companies
during the quarter.  Our  portfolio  companies  operate in  industries  that are
rapidly evolving and extremely competitive. For equity investments in non-public
companies  where  there  is  not a  market  in  which  their  value  is  readily
determinable,  we assess each  investment  for  indicators of impairment at each
quarter-end  based  primarily on  achievement  of business plan  objectives  and
current market conditions,  among other factors, and information available to us
at the time of this quarterly  assessment.  The primary business plan objectives
we consider include,  among others, those related to financial  performance such
as achievement  of planned  financial  results or completion of capital  raising
activities,  and those that are not  primarily  financial  in nature such as the
launching of technology or the hiring of key employees. If it is determined that
an impairment has occurred with respect to an investment in a portfolio company,
in the absence of  quantitative  valuation  metrics,  management  estimates  the
impairment and/or the net realizable value of the portfolio  investment based on
public-  and  private-company   market  comparable  information  and  valuations
completed for companies similar to our portfolio companies.

    INTEREST  RATE RISK.  Our  exposure  to market risk for a change in interest
rates relates to our investment portfolio.  We place our investments in a mix of
short-term  tax exempt and taxable  instruments  that meet high  credit  quality
standards,  as specified in our investment  policy.  This policy also limits the
amount of credit exposure to any one issue, issuer and type of instrument. We do
not  anticipate any material  losses with respect to our  short-term  investment
portfolio.

                                       26


    The following table presents the carrying value and related weighted-average
total return for our investment portfolio.  The carrying value approximates fair
value  at  July  31,  2002.  In  accordance  with  our  investment  policy,  the
weighted-average duration of our total invested funds does not exceed one year.

    Principal (Notional) Amounts in U.S. Dollars:


                                                                                  WEIGHTED-AVERAGE
                                                                  CARRYING           AFTER TAX
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT INTEREST RATES)                              AMOUNT           TOTAL RETURN
                                                              ----------------- ---------------------
                                                                           
Short-term investments - fixed rate                                  96,647             4.09%
Short-term investments (RESTRICTED) - fixed rate                      1,900             1.56%
Cash-Equivalent investments (RESTRICTED)- variable rate               3,597             1.10%
Money market funds - variable rate                                  236,678             1.28%
                                                              -----------------
   Total interest bearing instruments                         $     338,822             2.08%
                                                              =================



    FOREIGN  CURRENCY  RISK.  At the present  time,  we do not  generally  hedge
anticipated  foreign currency cash flows but hedge only those currency exposures
associated  with certain assets and  liabilities  denominated  in  nonfunctional
currencies.  Hedging activities  undertaken are intended to offset the impact of
currency  fluctuations on these balances.  The success of this activity  depends
upon  the  accuracy  of  our  estimates  of  balances   denominated  in  various
currencies,  primarily the Euro,  Japanese  yen,  Taiwan  dollar,  British pound
sterling,  Canadian dollar,  Singapore dollar, Korean Won and Israeli Shekel. We
had  contracts for the sale and purchase of foreign  currencies  with a notional
value expressed in U.S.  dollars of $255.1 million as of July 31, 2002.  Looking
forward,  we do not anticipate any material  adverse effect on our  consolidated
financial position,  results of operations, or cash flows resulting from the use
of these instruments.  There can be no assurance that these hedging transactions
will be effective in the future.

    The following table provides  information about our foreign exchange forward
contracts at July 31, 2002. Due to the short-term nature of these contracts, the
contract rate  approximates the  weighted-average  contractual  foreign currency
exchange rate at July 31, 2002. These forward  contracts mature in approximately
thirty days.

    Short-Term  Forward  Contracts to Sell and Buy Foreign  Currencies  in U.S.
Dollars:

                                                  USD AMOUNT      CONTRACT RATE
                                                ---------------- ---------------
     (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT FOR CONTRACT RATES)
     Forward Net Contract Values:
        Euro                                      $   202,024           1.0148
        Japanese yen                                   24,645         118.3700
        Taiwan dollar                                  15,285          33.7670
        Korean Won                                      3,310       1,196.2500
        Israeli Shekel                                  1,319           4.7400
        Canadian dollar                                 5,784           1.5744
        Singapore dollar                                2,770           1.7633
                                                ----------------
                                                  $   255,137
                                                ================

    The unrealized gains/losses on the outstanding forward contracts at July 31,
2002 were  immaterial to our  consolidated  financial  statements.  The realized
gain/losses  on  these  contracts  as they  matured  were  not  material  to our
consolidated  financial  position,  results of  operations or cash flows for the
periods presented.

    We apply  Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards  No. 133 (SFAS 133),
ACCOUNTING FOR DERIVATIVE  INSTRUMENTS AND HEDGING  ACTIVITIES,  as amended,  in
accounting  for our  derivative  financial  instruments.  SFAS  133  establishes
accounting  and  reporting  standards  for  derivative  instruments  and hedging
activities.  SFAS 133 requires  that all  derivatives  be  recognized  as either
assets or  liabilities  at fair value.  Derivatives  that are not  designated as
hedging  instruments  are  adjusted  to  fair  value  through  earnings.  If the
derivative is designated as a hedging instrument, depending on the nature of the
exposure  being hedged,  changes in fair value will either be offset against the
change in fair value of the hedged asset,  liability, or firm commitment through
earnings,   or  recognized  in  other  comprehensive  income  until  the  hedged
anticipated  transaction affects earnings.  The ineffective portion of the hedge
is  recognized  in  earnings  immediately.   We  do  not  believe  that  ongoing
application  of SFAS  133  will  significantly  alter  our  hedging  strategies.
However, its application may increase the volatility of other income and expense

                                       27


and other  comprehensive  income.  Apart from our foreign  currency  hedging and
forward sales of certain equity investments,  we do not use derivative financial
instruments.  In particular,  we do not use derivative financial instruments for
speculative or trading purposes.

    TERMINATION  OF AGREEMENT TO ACQUIRE IKOS SYSTEMS,  INC. On July 2, 2001, we
entered into an  Agreement  and Plan of Merger and  Reorganization  (the "Merger
Agreement") with IKOS Systems,  Inc. (IKOS).  The Merger Agreement  provided for
the acquisition of all outstanding shares of IKOS common stock by Synopsys.

    On December 7, 2001, Mentor Graphics  Corporation  (Mentor) commenced a cash
tender  offer to acquire all of the  outstanding  shares of IKOS common stock at
$11.00 per share, subject to certain conditions. On March 12, 2002, Synopsys and
IKOS  executed a  termination  agreement  by which the  parties  terminated  the
Synopsys-IKOS merger agreement and pursuant to which IKOS paid Synopsys the $5.5
million  termination fee required by the Synopsys-IKOS  merger  agreement.  This
termination  fee and $2.4 million of expenses  incurred in conjunction  with the
acquisition  are  included  in  other  income,  net on the  unaudited  condensed
consolidated  statement of income for the nine month period ended July 31, 2002.
Synopsys  subsequently  executed a revised termination agreement with Mentor and
IKOS in order to add Mentor as a party thereto.

    ACQUISITION OF AVANT! CORPORATION. On June 6, 2002 (the "closing date"), the
Company completed its merger with Avant!.

    REASONS FOR THE  ACQUISITION.  The Company's Board of Directors  unanimously
approved the Company's  merger with Avant!  at its December 1, 2001 meeting.  In
approving the merger agreement,  the Board of Directors consulted with legal and
financial  advisors  as well as with  management  and  considered  a  number  of
factors.  These  factors  include the fact that the merger is expected to enable
Synopsys  to  offer  its   customers   a  complete   end-to-end   solution   for
system-on-chip  design  that  includes  Synopsys'  logic  synthesis  and  design
verification tools with Avant!'s advanced place and route, physical verification
and design integrity products,  thus increasing  customers' design efficiencies.
By  increasing  customer  design  efficiencies,  Synopsys  expects to be able to
better compete for customers  designing the next  generation of  semiconductors.
Further,  by  gaining  access  to  Avant!'s  physical  design  and  verification
products,  as well as its broad customer base and  relationships,  Synopsys will
gain new opportunities to market its existing products. The foregoing discussion
of the information and factors considered by the Company's Board of Directors is
not intended to be exhaustive  but includes the material  factors  considered by
the Company's Board of Directors.

    PURCHASE PRICE.  Holders of Avant! common stock received 0.371 of a share of
Synopsys  common stock  (including  the  associated  preferred  stock rights) in
exchange  for each share of Avant!  common  stock owned as of the closing  date,
aggregating  14.5 million shares of Synopsys common stock. The fair value of the
Synopsys shares issued was based on a per share value of $54.74,  which is equal
to  Synopsys'  average  last  sale  price per share as  reported  on the  Nasdaq
National Market for the trading-day period two days before and after December 3,
2001, the date of the merger agreement.

    The total purchase consideration consists of the following:

        (IN THOUSANDS)
        Fair value of Synopsys common stock issued            $    795,388
        Estimated acquisition related costs                         37,342
        Estimated facilities closure costs                          62,638
        Estimated employee severance costs                          50,367
        Estimated fair value of options to purchase
          Synopsys common stock to be issued, less
          $8.1 million representing the portion of the
          intrinsic value of  Avant!'s  unvested options
          applicable  to the remaining vesting period               63,033
                                                              -----------------
                                                              $  1,008,768
                                                              =================

    The estimated  acquisition-related  costs of $37.3 million consist primarily
of banking,  legal and  accounting  fees,  printing  costs,  and other  directly
related  charges  including  contract  termination  costs of $6.7  million.  The
Company is currently reviewing all outstanding Avant! contracts to determine the
cost, if any, to exit existing contracts which may result in additional accruals
for contract  termination  costs in accordance  with Emerging  Issues Task Force
(EITF)  Issue  No.  95-3.   Any  such  accruals   would  increase  the  purchase
consideration and the allocation of the purchase consideration to goodwill.

    Estimated  facilities  closure  costs  includes  $54.2  million  related  to
Avant!'s  corporate  headquarters.  The lessor has  brought a claim  against the

                                       28


Company for the future amounts  payable under the lease  agreements.  The amount
accrued at the closing  date is equal to the future  amounts  payable  under the
related lease agreements,  without taking into  consideration in the accrual any
defenses we may have to the claim.  Resolution of this  contingency at an amount
different  from that  accrued  will  result in an  increase  or  decrease in the
purchase  consideration  and the amount  allocated  to goodwill.  The  remaining
estimated  facilities closure costs totaling $8.4 million represents the present
value of the future obligations under certain of Avant!'s lease agreements which
the Company has or intends to terminate  under an approved  facilities exit plan
plus additional costs expected to be incurred  directly related to vacating such
facilities.

    Estimated employee severance costs include (i) $39.6 million in cash paid to
Avant!'s  Chairman of the Board,  consisting  of  severance  plus a cash payment
equal to the intrinsic  value of his  in-the-money  stock options at the closing
date, (ii) $4.5 million in cash severance  payments paid to redundant  employees
(primarily  sales  and  corporate  infrastructure  personnel)  terminated  on or
subsequent  to  the  consummation  of the  merger  under  an  approved  plan  of
termination and (iii) $6.3 million in termination payments to certain executives
in accordance with their respective pre-merger employment agreements.  The total
number of Avant!  employees  expected to be terminated as a result of the merger
is approximately 250.

    As of July 31, 2002, $73.3 million of costs described in the three preceding
paragraphs  have been paid and $77.1  million  of these  costs have not yet been
paid. The following table presents the components of  acquisition-related  costs
recorded, along with amounts paid through the third quarter of 2002.



                                                           Payments
                                           Total Cost       through        Balance at
(IN THOUSANDS)                                           July 31, 2002    July 31, 2002
                                           ------------ ---------------- ----------------
                                                                
Estimated acquisition related costs         $  37,342        $23,967          $13,375
Estimated facilities closure costs             62,638            262           62,376
Estimated employee severance costs             50,367         49,031            1,336
                                           ------------ ---------------- ----------------
Total                                        $150,347        $73,260          $77,087
                                           ============ ================ ================



    The total purchase  consideration  has been allocated on a preliminary basis
to the  assets  and  liabilities  acquired,  including  identifiable  intangible
assets,  based on  their  respective  fair  value  at the  acquisition  date and
resulted in excess purchase consideration over the net tangible and identifiable
intangible assets acquired of $344.9 million.  The following unaudited condensed
balance  sheet  data  presents  the  preliminary  fair  value of the  assets and
liabilities acquired and recorded at June 6, 2002.

(IN THOUSANDS)
Assets acquired
   Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments         $   241,313
   Accounts receivable                                            67,154
   Prepaid expenses and other current assets                      19,483
   Assets held for sale                                           33,220
   Intangible assets                                             365,000
   Goodwill                                                      344,949
   Other assets                                                    3,876
                                                           ----------------
     Total assets acquired                                    $1,074,995
                                                           ================

Liabilities acquired
   Accounts payable and accrued liabilities                  $   172,528
   Deferred revenue                                               30,080
   Income taxes payable                                           94,576
   Other liabilities                                               4,651
                                                           ----------------
     Total liabilities acquired                               $  301,835
                                                           ================

    Other current assets  acquired  includes an investment in a  venture-capital
fund valued at $12.8 million.  Management intends to dispose of this investment;
however,  the Company has been unable to obtain  certain  financial  records and
information required to effectively market the investment. The fair value of the
asset  recorded does not include any  adjustment of this  investment due to this
contingency.  Any  adjustment  to the  fair-value  of  this  investment  that is
ultimately  made will  increase or decrease the purchase  consideration  and the
allocation of the purchase consideration to goodwill.

                                       29


     UNAUDITED PRO FORMA RESULTS OF OPERATIONS. The following table presents pro
forma  results of operations  and gives effect to the proposed  merger as if the
merger had been consummated on November 1, 2000. The unaudited pro forma results
of operations  are not  necessarily  indicative of the results of operations had
the  acquisition  actually  occurred at the beginning of fiscal 2001,  nor is it
necessarily indicative of future operating results:




                                                         THREE MONTHS ENDED          NINE MONTHS ENDED
                                                              JULY 31,                    JULY 31,
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)                   2002           2001          2002         2001
                                                    -------------- -------------- ------------ ------------
                                                                                   
Revenues                                            $ 278,217       $ 276,922     $ 861,822     $ 789,308
Net income (loss)                                      16,099          18,434        71,697      (188,593)
Basic earnings (loss) per share                     $    0.23       $    0.25     $    1.12     $   (2.50)
Weighted average common shares outstanding             71,157          74,578        64,157        75,580
Diluted earnings (loss) per share                   $    0.21       $    0.23     $    1.04    $    (2.50)
Weighted  average common shares and dilutive stock
   options outstanding                                 74,955          80,351        68,698        75,580



     The  unaudited  pro forma  results of  operations  for each of the  periods
presented  exclude  non-recurring  merger  costs of $95,000  and $82,500 for the
contingently  refundable  insurance  policy and IPRD recorded by Synopsys in the
third  quarter of 2002 and  included in the  historical  condensed  consolidated
statement of operations.

    GOODWILL AND INTANGIBLE  ASSETS.  Goodwill,  representing  the excess of the
purchase  price  over the fair value of  tangible  and  identifiable  intangible
assets acquired in the merger will not be amortized consistent with the guidance
with SFAS 142.  The  goodwill  associated  with the  Avant!  acquisition  is not
deductible  for tax purposes.  In addition,  a portion of the purchase price was
allocated to the following identifiable intangible assets:



    Intangible Asset                       (IN THOUSANDS)    Estimated Useful Life
----------------------------------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------------
                                                      
    Core/developed technology                 $184,000       3 years
    Contract rights intangible                  51,700       3 years
    Customer installed base/relationship       102,500       6 years
    Trademarks and tradenames                   17,700       3 years
    Covenants not to compete                     9,100       The life of the related agreement (2 to 4 years)
                                          -----------------
    Total                                     $365,000
                                          =================



     CONTRACT RIGHTS  INTANGIBLE.  Avant! had executed signed license agreements
and delivered the initial  configuration of licensed  technologies under ratable
license arrangements, had executed signed contracts to provide PCS over a one to
three year period,  for which  Avant!  did not consider the fees to be fixed and
determinable  at the outset of the  arrangement.  There were no  receivables  or
deferred revenues recorded on Avant!'s  historical  financial  statements at the
closing date as the related  payments  were not yet due under  extended  payment
terms and deliveries  are scheduled to occur over the term of the  arrangements.
These ratable licenses and PCS arrangements  require future  performance by both
parties  and,  as such,  represent  executory  contracts.  The  contract  rights
intangible  asset  associated  with these  arrangements  is amortized to cost of
revenue over the related contract lives.

     The amortization of intangible  assets,  with the exception of the contract
rights  intangible  and  core/developed  technology,  is included  in  operating
expenses in the statement of operations  for the three- and  nine-month  periods
ended July 31, 2002.  Amortization of  core/developed  technology is included in
cost of revenue.

     ASSET  HELD FOR SALE.  In  January  2001,  Synopsys  sold the assets of its
silicon libraries business to Artisan Components,  Inc.  ("Artisan") and entered
into an  agreement  not to  engage,  directly  or  indirectly,  in the  physical
libraries  business  before  January 3, 2003.  Synopsys  also  agreed that if it
acquired a physical  libraries  business as part of a larger  acquisition,  then
Artisan  would have certain  preferential  rights to negotiate  and bid for such
business.  Prior  to  the  merger,  Avant!  engaged  in the  physical  libraries
business.  As a  result  of the  merger,  Synopsys  acquired  Avant!'s  physical
libraries business, and Synopsys is obligated to offer and sell such business to
Artisan under the terms of the January 2001  agreement.  The value  allocated to


                                      30


the acquired  libraries  business has been  recorded as net assets held for sale
and is based on the estimated future net cash flows from the libraries  business
in  accordance  with EITF 87-11,  ALLOCATION  OF PURCHASE  PRICE TO ASSETS TO BE
SOLD.  The  carrying  value of the  libraries  business  as of July 31,  2002 is
approximately  $33.1 million and losses for the period from June 6, 2002 through
July 31, 2002 that have been excluded  from the  consolidated  income  statement
were approximately $0.5 million.

     CADENCE  LITIGATION.  Avant!  and  its  subsidiaries  are  engaged  in  the
Avant!/Cadence   litigation,   a   material   civil   litigation   matter.   The
Avant!/Cadence  litigation  generally  arises  out of the same set of facts that
were the  subject  of a criminal  action  brought  against  Avant!  and  several
individuals by the District Attorney of Santa Clara

County, California, which action we refer to as the Santa Clara criminal action.
Avant!, Gerald C. Hsu, Chairman of Avant! and five former Avant!  employees pled
no contest to certain of the charges in the Santa Clara criminal action. As part
of that plea, Avant! paid approximately $35.3 million in fines and a hearing was
held on the amount of restitution owed to Cadence.  During the hearing,  Cadence
claimed  losses  of $683.3  million.  Ultimately,  the court in the Santa  Clara
criminal  action  required  Avant!  to pay Cadence  restitution in the amount of
$195.4 million. That amount has been fully paid.

     Cadence seeks  compensatory  damages and treble or other exemplary  damages
from  Avant!  in the  Avant!/Cadence  litigation  under  theories  of  copyright
infringement, misappropriation of trade secrets, inducing breach of contract and
false  advertising.  Synopsys  believes Avant!  has defenses to all of Cadence's
claims in the  Avant!/Cadence  litigation.  Cadence has not fully quantified the
amount of  damages it seeks in the  Avant!/Cadence  litigation.  Should  Cadence
ultimately  succeed in the prosecution of its claims,  however,  Avant! could be
required to pay substantial  monetary  damages to Cadence.  Some or all of these
damages may be offset by the $195.4 million  restitution  paid to Cadence in the
Santa Clara criminal action.  Approximately  $500 million in additional  damages
would be covered by the insurance  policy  Synopsys has obtained with respect to
the Avant!/Cadence litigation, which is described below.

     Injunctions  entered in 1997 and 1998 enjoined  Avant!  from  marketing its
early  place and route  products,  ArcCell  and  Aquarius,  based on a  judicial
determination  that they incorporated  portions of Cadence's Design Framework II
source code (DFII). The injunctions also prohibit Avant! from possessing, using,
selling  or  licensing  any  product  or work  copied or  derived  from DFII and
directly  or  indirectly  marketing,  selling  leasing,  licensing,  copying  or
transferring any of the ArcCell or Aquarius products.  Avant!  ceased marketing,
selling,  leasing,  licensing  or  supporting  all of the  ArcCell  or  Aquarius
products in 1996 and 1999,  respectively.  The DFII code is not  incorporated in
any  current  Avant!  product.  Although  Cadence  has not  made a claim  in the
Avant!/Cadence  litigation  against any current  Avant!  product,  including its
Apollo and Astro place and route  products,  and has not introduced any evidence
that any such product infringes Cadence's  intellectual property rights, Cadence
has publicly implied that it intends to assert such claims. Synopsys believes it
would  have  defenses  to  any  such  claims.  Nonetheless,  should  Cadence  be
successful at proving that any past or then-current Avant!  product incorporated
intellectual   property   misappropriated   from  Cadence,   Synopsys  could  be
permanently enjoined from further use of such intellectual property, which might
require  modification to existing products and/or suspension of the sale of such
products until such Cadence intellectual property was removed.

    In  connection  with the merger,  Synopsys  has entered into a policy with a
subsidiary of American International Group, Inc., a AAA-rated insurance company,
whereby  insurance  has been  obtained for certain  compensatory,  exemplary and
punitive damages, penalties and fines and attorneys' fees arising out of pending
litigation between Avant! and Cadence.  The policy does not provide coverage for
litigation other than the Avant!/Cadence litigation.

    The Company paid total premium of $335 million for the policy, of which $240
million is contingently refundable. Under the policy the insurer is obligated to
pay covered loss up to a limit of  liability  equaling (a) $500 million plus (b)
interest  accruing at the fixed rate of 2%,  compounded  semi-annually,  on $250
million (the "interest  component"),  as reduced by previous covered losses. The
policy  will  expire   following  a  final   judgment  or   settlement   of  the
Avant!/Cadence litigation or any earlier date upon Synopsys' election. Upon such
expiration,  Synopsys  will be entitled to a payment  equal to $240 million plus
the interest  component  less any covered loss (which,  for this purpose,  shall
include  legal fees only to the extent  that the  aggregate  amount of such fees
exceeds $10 million).

    The contingently  refundable portion of the insurance premium ($240 million)
is included in the July 31, 2002 balance sheet as a long-term  restricted asset.
Interest  earned on $250  million will be included in other  income,  net in the
post-merger  statement  of  operations.  The balance of the premium  paid to the
insurer  ($95  million) is included  in  integration  expense for the three- and
nine-month periods ended July 31, 2002.

    At the closing date,  the  Avant!/Cadence  litigation was accounted for as a
pre-merger  contingency  because a litigation  judgment or settlement amount, if
any, is not probable or  estimable.  If a litigation  loss becomes  probable and
estimable  after  the date of the  merger,  such loss  will be  included  in net
income.

                                      31


     INTEGRATION COSTS.  Non-recurring integration costs incurred by the Company
relate to merger activities which are not included in the purchase consideration
under EITF 95-3. These costs are expensed as incurred.  During the third quarter
of 2002,  integration  costs  totaled  $117.3  million.  These  costs  consisted
primarily  of (i) a  premium  of  $95.0  million  related  to  the  contingently
refundable  insurance  policy,  (ii) $14.7  million  related to  write-downs  of
Synopsys  facilities and property under the approved  facility exit plan,  (iii)
severance  costs for Synopsys  employees who were  terminated as a result of the
merger and costs associated with transition  employees totaled $6.2 million, and
(iv) $1.3  million  related  to the  write-off  of  software  licenses  owned by
Synopsys which were originally purchased from Avant!.

    VALUATION  OF IPRD.  Upon  consummation  of the Avant!  merger,  the Company
immediately  recognized  expense of $82.5 million  representing the value of the
acquired in-process technology for which technological  feasibility had not been
achieved and no alternative future uses had been established. The value assigned
to acquired in-process  technology was determined by identifying  products under
research in areas for which technological  feasibility had not been established.
The  in-process  technology was then  segmented  into two  classifications:  (i)
in-process   technology   --  completed  and  (ii)   in-process   technology  --
to-be-completed,  giving  explicit  consideration  to the value  created  by the
research  and  development  efforts  of  the  acquired  business  prior  to  the
acquisition  and to be created by Synopsys  after the  acquisition.  These value
creation efforts were estimated by considering the following major factors:  (i)
time-based data, (ii) cost-based data and (iii) complexity-based data.

    The value of the in-process  technology  was  determined  using a discounted
cash flow model similar to the income approach, focusing on the income-producing
capabilities of the in-process  technologies.  Under this approach, the value is
determined  by  estimating  the revenue  contribution  generated  by each of the
identified  products  classified  within the  classification  segments.  Revenue
estimates were based on (i) individual product revenues, (ii) anticipated growth
rates (iii)  anticipated  product  development and  introduction  schedules (iv)
product  sales  cycles,  and (v) the  estimated  life of a product's  underlying
technology. From the revenue estimates,  operating expense estimates,  including
costs of sales, general and administrative,  selling and marketing, income taxes
and a use charge for contributory  assets,  were deducted to arrive at operating
income.  Revenue  growth rates were estimated by management for each product and
gave  consideration  to  relevant  market  sizes and  growth  factors,  expected
industry trends, the anticipated nature and timing of new product  introductions
by us and our competitors,  individual  product sales cycles,  and the estimated
life  of each  product's  underlying  technology.  Operating  expense  estimates
reflect Synopsys' historical expense ratios.  Additionally,  these projects will
require  continued  research and development  after they have reached a state of
technological and commercial feasibility.  The resulting operating income stream
was  discounted  to reflect  its present  value at the date of the  acquisition.
These  estimates  are  subject  to  change,   given  the  uncertainties  of  the
development  process,  and no assurance can be given that  deviations from these
estimates will not occur or that Synopsys will realize any anticipated  benefits
of the acquisition.

    The rate used to  discount  the net cash  flows  from  purchased  in-process
technology  is the  weighted  average  cost of capital  (WACC) for the  Company,
taking into account its  required  rates of return from  investments  in various
areas of the  enterprise,  and reflecting the inherent  uncertainties  in future
revenue  estimates  from  technology   investments   including  the  uncertainty
surrounding the successful  development of the acquired  in-process  technology,
the useful life of such technology, the profitability levels of such technology,
if any, and the uncertainty of technological  advances, all of which are unknown
at this time.

    At the date of the Avant! merger, the principal in-process technologies were
identified based on the following product families:  PPD Division, VPD Division,
APD Division,  LPD Division,  MTB, TCAD and Analogy. For purposes of valuing the
IPRD in accordance with the methodology discussed above, the following estimates
were used: revenue growth ranging from 16% in year two to 10% in year nine; cost
of sales -- 7% of revenue in each year; general and  administrative  expenses --
5% of revenue in each year;  and sales and  marketing  -- 28% of revenue in each
year.  In addition,  it was assumed  there would be no expense  reduction due to
economic synergies as a result of the acquisition. The rate used to discount the
net  cash  flows  from  the  purchased   in-process   technology  was  27%.  The
technologies were approximately 40% to 90% complete at the acquisition date. The
nature of the efforts to complete these projects related, in varying degrees, to
the  completion  of all  planning,  designing,  prototyping,  verification,  and
testing   activities   that  are  necessary  to  establish   that  the  proposed
technologies met their design specifications,  including functional,  technical,
and economic  performance  requirements.  Expenditures  to complete the acquired
in-process technologies are expected to total approximately $17.5 million.

     ACQUISITION OF INSILICON CORPORATION.  On July 23, 2002, we entered into an
Agreement and Plan of Merger with inSilicon Corporation  (inSilicon) under which
we  commenced a cash tender  offer to acquire all of the  outstanding  shares of
inSilicon  common  stock at $4.05  per  share or  approximately  $64.9  million,
subject to certain  conditions.  Following the consummation of the tender offer,
inSilicon  will merge with and into a wholly owned  subsidiary  of Synopsys.  We
will account for the merger under the purchase method of accounting.  The merger
is subject  to  certain  conditions,  including  approval  of the merger and the
Agreement  and Plan of Merger by the  inSilicon  stockholders,  compliance  with
regulatory requirements and customary closing conditions.

                                       32


     ACQUISITION  OF  CO-DESIGN.  On September  6, 2002,  we acquired all of the
outstanding shares of capital stock of Co-Design  Automation,  Inc.  (Co-Design)
for  consideration  consisting  of cash  and  notes of  $29.7  million  and $4.8
million,   respectively,   and  assumed  options  with  an  aggregate  value  of
approximately  $1.3  million.  We will account for the merger under the purchase
method of  accounting.  As of the date of filing the Form 10-Q, the valuation of
Co-Design's assets and liabilities, including identifiable intangible assets, as
of the closing date has not been completed.  We purchased Co-Design for a number
of reasons,  including (i) the  combination of Co-Design's  technology  with our
verification tools is expected to speed the delivery of next-generation hardware
description  language solutions;  (ii) the acquisition will help promote the use
of the Superlog language,  which we believe will be important in developing next
generation  verification tools and increasing designer  productivity;  and (iii)
the acquisition gives us access to Co-Design's  industry experts. As of the date
of filing the Form 10-Q,  the valuation of Co-Design's  assets and  liabilities,
including  identifiable  intangible  assets, as of the closing date has not been
completed.

    EFFECT OF NEW ACCOUNTING  STANDARDS.  In July 2001, the Financial Accounting
Standards Board (FASB) issued Statements of Financial  Accounting  Standards No.
141,  BUSINESS  COMBINATIONS  (SFAS  141),  and  No.  142,  GOODWILL  AND  OTHER
INTANGIBLE  ASSETS  (SFAS 142).  SFAS 141 requires  that the purchase  method of
accounting be used for all business  combinations  initiated after June 30, 2001
and specifies criteria  intangible assets acquired in a purchase method business
combination  must meet to be recognized  apart from goodwill.  SFAS 142 requires
that goodwill and intangible  assets with  indefinite  useful lives no longer be
amortized,  but instead be tested for impairment at least annually in accordance
with the provisions of SFAS 142.

    The Company  adopted the provisions of SFAS 141 on July 1, 2001.  Under SFAS
141,  goodwill and intangible  assets with indefinite useful lives acquired in a
purchase business combination completed after June 30, 2001, but before SFAS 142
is  adopted,  will  not be  amortized  but will  continue  to be  evaluated  for
impairment in accordance with SFAS 121.  Goodwill and intangible assets acquired
in  business  combinations  completed  before  July 1, 2001 will  continue to be
amortized  and tested for  impairment  in  accordance  with  current  accounting
guidance until the date of adoption of SFAS 142.

    Upon adoption of SFAS 142, the Company must evaluate its existing intangible
assets and goodwill acquired in purchase business  combinations prior to July 1,
2001, and make any necessary  reclassifications in order to conform with the new
criteria in SFAS 141 for recognition apart from goodwill.  Upon adoption of SFAS
142,  the Company  will be required to reassess  the useful  lives and  residual
values of all intangible  assets acquired,  and make any necessary  amortization
period  adjustments.  The Company  will also be required  to test  goodwill  for
impairment  in accordance  with the  provisions of SFAS 142 within the six-month
period following  adoption.  Any impairment loss will be measured as of the date
of adoption and recognized  immediately as the cumulative  effect of a change in
accounting  principle.  Any  subsequent  impairment  losses  will be included in
operating activities.

    The Company  expects to adopt SFAS 142 on  November 1, 2002.  As of July 31,
2002,  unamortized  goodwill is $23.1  million  which,  in  accordance  with the
Statements,  will  continue to be  amortized  until the date of adoption of SFAS
142.  Amortization  of goodwill and other  intangible  assets for the nine-month
period ended July 31, 2002 is $12.1 million. Goodwill totaling $344.9 relates to
acquisitions  subsequent  to July 1,  2001 and is  therefore  not  amortized  in
accordance with FAS 142. The Company does not have any intangible assets with an
indefinite  useful life.  The Company is currently  evaluating the impact of the
adoption of this statement on its financial position and results of operations.

    In July 2001, the FASB issued  Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards
No. 143,  ACCOUNTING  FOR ASSET  RETIREMENT  OBLIGATIONS  (SFAS  143).  SFAS 143
requires  that  asset  retirement   obligations   that  are  identifiable   upon
acquisition,  construction  or  development  and during the operating  life of a
long-lived  asset be  recorded as a  liability  using the  present  value of the
estimated cash flows. A corresponding amount would be capitalized as part of the
asset's  carrying  amount and amortized to expense over the asset's useful life.
The Company is required to adopt the  provisions of SFAS 143 effective  November
1, 2002.  The  adoption  of SFAS 143 will not have a  significant  impact on the
company's financial position and results of operations.

    In August 2001, the FASB issued Statement of Financial  Accounting Standards
No. 144,  ACCOUNTING FOR THE  IMPAIRMENT OR DISPOSAL OF LONG-LIVED  ASSETS (SFAS
144), which addresses  financial  accounting and reporting for the impairment or
disposal of long-lived  assets and supersedes  SFAS No. 121,  ACCOUNTING FOR THE
IMPAIRMENT OF LONG-LIVED ASSETS AND FOR LONG-LIVED ASSETS TO BE DISPOSED OF, and
the  accounting  and reporting  provisions of APB Opinion No. 30,  REPORTING THE
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS FOR A DISPOSAL OF A SEGMENT OF A BUSINESS.  The Company is

                                       33


required to adopt the provisions of SFAS 144 no later than November 1, 2002. The
Company  does not expect that the  adoption of SFAS 144 will have a  significant
impact on its financial position and results of operations.

    In April 2002, the FASB issued Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards
No. 145,  RESCISSION  OF FASB  STATEMENTS  NO. 4, 44, AND 64,  AMENDMENT OF FASB
STATEMENT NO. 13, AND TECHNICAL  CORRECTIONS (SFAS 145). SFAS 145 eliminates the
requirement that gains and losses from the extinguishments of debt be aggregated
and, if material, classified as an extraordinary item, net of the related income
tax effect.  However,  an entity would not be prohibited from  classifying  such
gains and  losses as  extraordinary  items so long as they are both  unusual  in
nature and  infrequent  in  occurrence.  The  Company is  required  to adopt the
provisions of SFAS 145 effective November 1, 2002. SFAS 145 also amends SFAS 13,
ACCOUNTING  FOR LEASES and certain other  authoritative  pronouncements  to make
technical  corrections or clarifications.  SFAS 145 will be effective related to
the amendment of SFAS 13 for all transactions  occurring after May 15, 2002. The
Company  does not expect that the  adoption of SFAS 145 will have a  significant
impact on its financial position and results of operations.

    In July 2002, the FASB issued  Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards
No.  146  (SFAS  146),  ACCOUNTING  FOR EXIT OR  DISPOSAL  ACTIVITIES.  SFAS 146
addresses  the  recognition,  measurement,  and  reporting  of  costs  that  are
associated  with  exit and  disposal  activities,  including  costs  related  to
terminating a contract that is not a capital lease and termination benefits that
employees who are involuntarily terminated receive under the terms of a one-time
benefit  arrangement that is not an ongoing benefit arrangement or an individual
deferred-compensation  contract.  SFAS 146 supersedes Emerging Issues Task Force
Issue No. 94-3, LIABILITY  RECOGNITION FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEE TERMINATION BENEFITS
AND OTHER  COSTS TO EXIT AN  ACTIVITY  (INCLUDING  CERTAIN  COSTS  INCURRED IN A
RESTRUCTURING)  and  requires  liabilities  associated  with  exit and  disposal
activities  to be expensed as incurred.  SFAS 146 will be effective  for exit or
disposal  activities of the Company that are initiated  after December 31, 2002.
The Company  believes  that the adoption of SFAS 146 will not have a significant
impact on its financial position and results of operations.

LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

    Cash,  cash  equivalents and short-term  investments  were $446.2 million at
July 31, 2002, a decrease of $30.2 million,  or 6%, from October 31, 2001.  Cash
used in operating  activities  was $78.1  million for the nine months ended July
31, 2002 compared to $123.4  million  provided by operating  activities  for the
same  period in the prior  year.  The  decrease  in cash  flows  from  operating
activities  is due  primarily to payments for income taxes made during the first
quarter,  payments made for the insurance premium,  professional fees, severance
and integration of Avant! as well as a payment to settle pending litigation.

    Cash provided by investing  activities  was $94.3 million and $110.8 million
in the first nine months of 2002 and 2001,  respectively.  This decrease in cash
provided  by  investing  activities  relates  primarily  to  the  purchase  of a
contingently   refundable   insurance  policy  relating  to  the  Avant!/Cadence
litigation, totaling $240.0 million, the effect of which was partially offset by
the cash received from Avant! on the closing date, totaling $235.0 million.  Net
proceeds  from the sale of  short-  and  long-term  investments  totaled  $136.4
million for the nine  months  ended July 31,  2002  compared to net  proceeds of
investments  totaling  $159.6  million for the same period during 2001.  Capital
expenditures decreased $16.1 to $35.9 million for the nine-months ended July 31,
2002 from  $52.0  million  during  the same  period  in  fiscal  2001 due to the
expenditures  related to  construction  of our Oregon  facilities  and computing
equipment to upgrade our infrastructure  systems incurred during fiscal 2001. In
addition,  cash  proceeds from the sale of our silicon  libraries  business were
$4.1 million in the first quarter of fiscal 2001.

    Cash provided by financing  activities was $61.8 million for the nine months
ended July 31, 2002  compared to $249.0  million  used in  financing  activities
during the same period during fiscal 2001.  Financing proceeds from the exercise
of stock options during the nine months ended July 31, 2002 and 2001 were $103.6
million and $89.3  million,  respectively.  The primary  financing  uses of cash
during the nine  months  ended July 31,  2002 and 2001 were for the  purchase of
treasury stock,  net of reissuances,  totaling $41.8 million and $331.9 million,
respectively.

    Accounts receivable increased to $233.2 million at July 31, 2002 compared to
$146.3 million at October 31, 2001. Days sales outstanding,  which is calculated
based on revenues for the most recent quarter and accounts  receivable as of the
balance  sheet  date,  increased  to 85 days as of July 31, 2002 from 73 days at
October 31, 2001 as a result of an  increase in accounts  receivable  due to the
Avant! acquisition.

    Our principle sources of cash are collections of accounts receivable and the
issuance of common  stock.  During  fiscal 2002 we have  increasingly  agreed to

                                       34


extended payment terms on our TSLs, which has had a negative effect on cash flow
from  operations.  Since  the  middle of last  year to this  past  quarter,  the
percentage  of cash  scheduled to be  collected  within 60 days of the order has
moved from  approximately  65% to approximately  22%, and the percentage of cash
scheduled to be collected  within one year has moved from  approximately  88% to
66%. We believe that our current cash, cash equivalents, short-term investments,
lines of credit,  and cash generated from  operations  will satisfy our business
requirements for at least the next twelve months.

FACTORS THAT MAY AFFECT FUTURE RESULTS

    WEAKNESS IN THE  SEMICONDUCTOR  AND  ELECTRONICS  BUSINESSES  MAY NEGATIVELY
IMPACT SYNOPSYS'  BUSINESS.  Synopsys' business depends on the semiconductor and
electronics  businesses.  In 2001, these businesses  experienced  their sharpest
decline in orders and revenue in over 20 years and this  weakness has  continued
in 2002.

    Purchases of our products are largely dependent upon the commencement of new
design projects by semiconductor  manufacturers and their customers,  the number
of design engineers and the increasing  complexity of designs.  During 2001 many
semi-conductor  and electronic  companies  cancelled or deferred design projects
and reduced  their design  engineering  staffs,  which  negatively  impacted our
orders and  revenues,  particularly  orders and revenues  from our  professional
services business.  Demand for our products and services may also be affected by
partnerships and/or mergers in the semiconductor and systems  industries,  which
may reduce the aggregate  level of purchases of our products and services by the
companies  involved.  Continuation or worsening of the current conditions in the
semiconductor  industry,  and continued  consolidation among our customers,  all
could have a material  adverse effect on our business,  financial  condition and
results of operations.

    SYNOPSYS'  REVENUE AND  EARNINGS  MAY  FLUCTUATE.  Many  factors  affect our
revenue and earnings,  which makes it difficult to achieve  predictable  revenue
and  earnings  growth.  Among  these  factors are  customer  product and service
demand, product license terms, and the timing of revenue recognition on products
and services sold. The following  specific  factors could affect our revenue and
earnings in a particular quarter or over several quarterly or annual periods:

o    Our products are complex,  and before buying them  customers  spend a great
     deal of time  reviewing and testing them.  Our  customers'  evaluation  and
     purchase  cycles do not  necessarily  match our quarterly  periods.  In the
     past, we have received a disproportionate volume of orders in the last week
     of a quarter, and this trend has become more pronounced in recent quarters.
     In addition,  a large  proportion  of our business is  attributable  to our
     largest customers. As a result, if any order, and especially a large order,
     is delayed  beyond the end of a fiscal  period,  our orders for that period
     could be below our plan and our revenue  for that period or future  periods
     could be below any targets we may have published.

o    Accounting  rules  determine when revenue is recognized on our orders,  and
     therefore  impact  how much  revenue  we will  report in any  given  fiscal
     period.  The  authoritative  literature  under  which  Synopsys  recognizes
     revenue  has been,  and is  expected to continue to be, the subject of much
     interpretative  guidance. In general, revenue is recognized on TSLs ratably
     over the term of the license and on perpetual licenses upon delivery of the
     license. For any given order,  however, the specific terms agreed to with a
     customer  may have the  effect  under  the  accounting  rules of  requiring
     revenue  treatment  different  from  the  treatment  we  intended  and,  in
     developing our financial plans, expected.  Therefore,  for any given fiscal
     period it is possible for us to fall short in our revenue  and/or  earnings
     plan even while orders and backlog remain on plan or,  conversely,  to meet
     or exceed our revenue and/or  earnings plan because of backlog and deferred
     revenue, while aggregate orders are under plan.

o    Our revenue and earnings  targets are based,  in part,  upon an  assumption
     that we will achieve a license mix of perpetual  licenses (on which revenue
     is generally  recognized in the quarter shipped) and TSLs (on which revenue
     is recognized over the term of license) within a specified range,  which is
     adjusted from time to time. If we are unable to achieve a mix in this range
     our ability to achieve  short-term  or long-term  revenue  and/or  earnings
     targets may be impaired.

     SYNOPSYS MAY NOT BE ABLE TO SUCCESSFULLY COMPETE IN THE EDA INDUSTRY, WHICH
WOULD HAVE A MATERIAL ADVERSE EFFECT ON SYNOPSYS' RESULTS OF OPERATIONS. The EDA
industry is highly competitive.  We compete against other EDA vendors,  and with
customers'  internally  developed design tools and internal design  capabilities
for a share of the overall EDA budgets of our potential  customers.  In general,
competition is based on product quality and features,  post-sale support, price,
payment terms and, as discussed  below,  the ability to offer a complete  design
flow. Our competitors include companies that offer a broad range of products and

                                       35


services,  such as Cadence Design Systems, Inc. and Mentor Graphics Corporation,
as well as companies, including numerous recently public and start-up companies,
that offer products focused on a discrete phase of the integrated circuit design
process.  In the  current  economic  environment  price and  payment  terms have
increased in importance as a basis for  competition.  During fiscal 2002 we have
increasingly  agreed to  extended  payment  terms on our  TSLs,  which has had a
negative effect on cash flow from operations. In addition, in certain situations
our  competitors  are  offering  aggressive  discounts on their  products.  As a
result, average prices may fall.

    IF WE ARE UNABLE TO DEVELOP AN INTEGRATED  DESIGN FLOW PRODUCT AND OTHER NEW
PRODUCTS WE MAY BE UNABLE TO COMPETE  EFFECTIVELY  Increasingly,  EDA  companies
compete on the basis of design  flows  involving  integrated  logic and physical
design products rather than on the basis of individual  point tools performing a
discrete  phase of the design  process.  The need to offer an integrated  design
flow will become  increasingly  important  as ICs grow more  complex.  After the
acquisition of Avant!  we offer all of the point tools required to design an IC,
some of which  integrate logic and physical  design  capabilities.  Our products
compete  principally  with design flow  products  from  Cadence and Magma Design
Automation,  which are in some respects more integrated  than our products.  Our
future success  depends on our ability to integrate  Synopsys'  logic design and
physical  synthesis  products with the physical  design  products  acquired from
Avant!,  which will require significant  engineering and development work. There
can be no guarantee that we will be able to offer a competitive  complete design
flow to customers.  If we are unsuccessful in developing  integrated design flow
products on a timely basis or if we are unsuccessful in developing or convincing
customers  to adopt such a such  products,  our  competitive  position  could be
significantly weakened.

    In order to  sustain  revenue  growth  over the long  term,  we will have to
enhance our existing  products,  introduce  new products  that are accepted by a
broad range of  customers  and to  generate  growth in our  consulting  services
business.  Product  success is difficult  to predict.  The  introduction  of new
products and growth of a market for such products cannot be assured. In the past
we, like all  companies,  have  introduced new products that have failed to meet
our revenue  expectations.  Expanding  revenue from  consulting  services may be
difficult in the current economic environment.  Increasing consulting orders and
revenue while  maintaining an adequate  level of profit can be difficult.  There
can be no  assurance  that we will  be  successful  in  expanding  revenue  from
existing or new  products  at the  desired  rate or in  expanding  our  services
business,  and the failure to do so would have a material  adverse effect on our
business, financial condition and results of operations.

    SYNOPSYS  MAY  FAIL  TO  INTEGRATE   SUCCESSFULLY   SYNOPSYS'  AND  AVANT!'S
OPERATIONS.  AS A RESULT,  SYNOPSYS MAY NOT ACHIEVE THE ANTICIPATED  BENEFITS OF
THE ACQUISITION. Achieving the benefits of our acquisition of Avant! will depend
on  many  factors,  including  the  successful  and  timely  integration  of the
products,   technology  and  sales  operations  of  the  two  companies.   These
integration efforts may be difficult and time consuming,  especially considering
the highly technical and complex nature of each company's  products.  Failure to
achieve a successful and timely integration of the Synopsys and Avant!  products
and sales operations could result in the loss of existing or potential customers
of Synopsys and Avant! and could have a material adverse effect on our business,
financial  condition and results of  operations.  Integration  efforts will also
divert  significant  management  attention  and  resources.  This  diversion  of
attention and  resources  could have an adverse  effect on Synopsys  during such
transition period.

    OTHER  BUSINESSES THAT SYNOPSYS HAS ACQUIRED OR THAT SYNOPSYS MAY ACQUIRE IN
THE FUTURE MAY NOT  PERFORM AS  PROJECTED.  We have  acquired  or merged  with a
number of  companies  in recent  years,  and as part of our  efforts to increase
revenue and expand our product and services  offerings we may acquire additional
companies.  In addition to  acquiring  Avant!,  in July 2002,  we  announced  an
agreement to acquire  inSilicon  Corporation  and in September 2002 we completed
the  acquisition  of  Co-Design  Automation,  Inc. In addition to direct  costs,
acquisitions pose a number of risks,  including  potential  dilution of earnings
per share,  problems in integrating the acquired products and employees into our
business, the failure to realize expected synergies or cost savings, the failure
of acquired  products to achieve  projected  sales, the drain on management time
for acquisition-related  activities, adverse effects on customer buying patterns
and  assumption  of unknown  liabilities.  While we  attempt to review  proposed
acquisitions carefully and negotiate terms that are favorable to us, there is no
assurance that any acquisition will have a positive effect on our performance.

    CONTINUED  STAGNATION OF INTERNATIONAL  ECONOMIES WOULD ADVERSELY AFFECT OUR
PERFORMANCE.  During the three and nine months ended July 31,  2002,  35% of our
revenue was  derived  from  outside  North  America,  as compared to 37% and 38%
during the same periods in fiscal 2001,  respectively.  International  sales are
vulnerable  to regional or  worldwide  economic or political  conditions  and to
changes in foreign currency  exchange rates.  Economic  conditions in Europe and
Japan have been  stagnant  for several  quarters,  and the longer this  weakness
persists  the more likely it is to have a negative  impact on our  business.  In
particular,   a  number  of  our   largest   European   customers   are  in  the
telecommunications  equipment  business,  which has weakened  considerably.  The
Japanese  economy  has  been  stagnant  for  several  years,  and  there  is  no
expectation of improvement in the near future.  If the Japanese  economy remains

                                       36


weak,  revenue  and orders from  Japan,  and perhaps the rest of Asia,  could be
adversely affected.  In addition,  the yen-dollar and Euro-dollar exchange rates
remain subject to unpredictable fluctuations.  Weakness of either currency could
adversely  affect revenue and orders from those regions.  Asian  countries other
than Japan also have experienced economic and currency problems in recent years,
and in most  cases  they have not fully  recovered.  Although  the Asia  Pacific
region is growing it is relatively  small as a percentage of our business and it
could be  difficult  to sustain  growth in the region if the rest of the world's
economies  continue  to  stagnate.  If  economic  conditions  worsen  orders and
revenues from the Asia Pacific region would be adversely affected.

    AVANT!  MAY BE REQUIRED  TO PAY  SUBSTANTIAL  AMOUNTS  UNDER  PENDING  CIVIL
LITIGATION.  Avant!  is a  defendant  in  litigation  brought  by  Cadence  (the
Avant!/Cadence  litigation)  in which  Cadence  seeks  compensatory  damages and
treble or other  exemplary  damages  under  theories of copyright  infringement,
misappropriation  of trade  secrets,  inducing  breach  of  contract  and  false
advertising.  As part of the  proceeding,  in 1997 and 1998 Avant!  was enjoined
from  marketing  two  products  based  on a  judicial  determination  that  they
incorporated certain Cadence intellectual  property. In July 2001 Avant!, Gerald
C. Hsu,  former  Chairman of Avant!,  and five former Avant!  employees  pled no
contest to certain criminal charges based on generally the same set of facts. As
part of that plea,  Avant!  paid fines of  approximately  $35  million  and paid
restitution  to Cadence of  approximately  $195  million.  Cadence has not fully
quantified the amount of damages it seeks in the Avant!/Cadence  litigation, nor
has it made a claim  against any  existing  product,  although  it has  publicly
implied  that it intends to assert such claims.  Synopsys  believes  Avant!  has
defenses to any Cadence claims.  Should  Cadence's  claims  ultimately  succeed,
however,  Avant!  could be  required  to pay  substantial  monetary  damages  to
Cadence.  Some  or all of  these  damages  may be  offset  by the  $195  million
restitution  already paid to Cadence,  and approximately $500 million in damages
(over and above whatever amount is subject to offset by the restitution payment)
owed by Synopsys would be paid by litigation insurance obtained by Synopsys. See
"Cadence  Litigation".  Should Cadence be successful at proving that any current
product incorporated  intellectual property misappropriated from Cadence, Avant!
and Synopsys could be permanently enjoined from further use of such intellectual
property.  To the extent that  damages  owed to Cadence  exceeded the any offset
plus the proceeds from the insurance  policy, or that Synopsys is precluded from
using any intellectual property acquired from Avant! and in use at the time of a
judgment and is unable to develop a suitable  replacement for such  intellectual
property, the Avant!/Cadence  litigation could have a material adverse effect on
Synopsys' business, financial condition and results of operation.

     THE INSURER UNDER THE LITIGATION INSURANCE MAY BE PREVENTED FROM PAYING FOR
CERTAIN LOSSES ON THE GROUNDS THAT SUCH PAYMENT VIOLATES PUBLIC POLICY. Synopsys
has  obtained   litigation   insurance   issued  by  a  subsidiary  of  American
International  Group,  Inc., an insurance company rated AAA by Standard & Poors.
See "Litigation". In some jurisdictions,  it is against public policy to provide
insurance  for willful  acts,  punitive  damages or similar  claims.  This could
potentially  affect the validity and  enforceability  of certain elements of the
litigation  insurance.  The legal agreement  governing the litigation  insurance
expressly  provides that the agreement will be governed by the laws of the State
of Delaware  and that any disputes  arising out of or relating to the  agreement
will be  resolved  in the courts of the State of  Delaware.  Synopsys  believes,
based upon advice it has received from Delaware  counsel,  that a Delaware court
would  enforce  both  of  these  provisions,  and  moreover  would  enforce  the
arrangement  under  Delaware  law,  including  to the  extent  it  provides  for
insurance for Avant!'s willful acts and punitive damages. Nonetheless, there can
be no assurance in this regard.  In other  cases,  courts,  including  courts in
California,  have applied local law to insurance  contracts  irrespective of the
parties' choice of law. Thus a court in a state other than Delaware could assert
jurisdiction over the  enforceability of this agreement and rule pursuant to the
law of a state other than Delaware that the litigation  protection  insurance is
not enforceable in whole or in part on grounds of public policy. For example, if
there  were  to  be  litigation   before  a  California   court   regarding  the
enforceability  of the insurance  policy it is possible that a California  court
might rule that the enforceability of the litigation protection insurance should
be governed by California law, despite the parties'  agreement that all disputes
arising  out of or relating  to the  agreement  be resolved in the courts of the
State of Delaware,  and that California law prevents  certain payments under the
policy. A Delaware court might abide by such a ruling of a California  court. To
the extent the insurer is  prevented  from paying  certain  losses on grounds of
public policy that would otherwise be covered by the insurance,  Avant!  will be
required to pay that  portion of the losses and the insurer may be  obligated to
refund a portion of the premium to Synopsys.

    SYNOPSYS DOES NOT HAVE CONTROL OVER DEFENSE OF THE AVANT!/CADENCE LITIGATION
OR THE  AUTHORITY  TO SETTLE  THE  AVANT!/CADENCE  LITIGATION  EXCEPT IN LIMITED
CIRCUMSTANCES.  Under the terms of the litigation insurance, the insurer has the
right  to  exercise  full  control  over  the  defense  of  the   Avant!/Cadence
litigation, and the right to exclusively control the negotiation, discussion and
terms of any proposed settlement,  except that (i) Synopsys retains the right to
settle the Avant!/Cadence litigation, with the consent of the insurer, for up to
$250 million plus accrued interest less certain costs, and (ii) Synopsys and the
defendants in the Avant!/Cadence  litigation each retain the right to consent or

                                       37


reasonably  withhold  consent to any  settlement  terms  proposed by the insurer
which  are  non-monetary  and can be  satisfied  only by future  performance  or
non-performance  by Synopsys or such defendants,  as the case may be. Therefore,
Synopsys  has a severely  limited  ability to control the  strategy  and tactics
adopted with respect to the  litigation  and may be subject to certain risks and
liabilities  relating  to  the  defense  and/or  potential  settlement  of  such
litigation.

    A FAILURE TO RECRUIT AND RETAIN KEY EMPLOYEES WOULD HAVE A MATERIAL  ADVERSE
EFFECT ON OUR ABILITY TO COMPETE.  Our success is  dependent  on  technical  and
other contributions of key employees.  We participate in a dynamic industry, and
our  headquarters  is  in  Silicon  Valley,   where,   despite  recent  economic
conditions,  skilled  technical,  sales  and  management  employees  are in high
demand. There are a limited number of qualified EDA and IC design engineers, and
the competition for such individuals is intense.  Despite  economic  conditions,
start-up activity in EDA remains  significant.  Experience at Synopsys is highly
valued  in the  EDA  industry  and the  general  electronics  industry,  and our
employees,  including  employees that joined Synopsys in the Avant!  merger, are
recruited  aggressively  by our  competitors  and by start-up  companies in many
industries.  In the past, we have  experienced,  and may continue to experience,
significant employee turnover. There can be no assurance that we can continue to
recruit and retain the  technical  and  managerial  personnel we need to run our
business. Failure to do so could have a material adverse effect on our business,
financial condition and results of operations.

    A FAILURE  TO  PROTECT  OUR  PROPRIETARY  TECHNOLOGY  WOULD  HAVE A MATERIAL
ADVERSE EFFECT ON SYNOPSYS' FINANCIAL  CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS.  Our
success  is  dependent,  in part,  upon our  proprietary  technology  and  other
intellectual  property rights.  We rely on agreements with customers,  employees
and  others,  and  intellectual   property  laws,  to  protect  our  proprietary
technology.  There  can  be no  assurance  that  these  agreements  will  not be
breached,  that we would have adequate remedies for any breach or that our trade
secrets  will not  otherwise  become  known  or be  independently  developed  by
competitors.   Moreover,  effective  intellectual  property  protection  may  be
unavailable  or  limited  in  certain  foreign  countries.  Failure to obtain or
maintain  appropriate  patent,  copyright  or trade secret  protection,  for any
reason,  could  have  a  material  adverse  effect  on our  business,  financial
condition and results of operations. In addition, there can be no assurance that
infringement  claims will not be asserted  against us and any such claims  could
require  us  to  enter  into  royalty  arrangements  or  result  in  costly  and
time-consuming  litigation  or  could  subject  us  to  damages  or  injunctions
restricting our sale of products or could require us to redesign products.

    OUR OPERATING EXPENSES DO NOT FLUCTUATE PROPORTIONATELY WITH FLUCTUATIONS IN
REVENUES,  WHICH COULD MATERIALLY  ADVERSELY AFFECT OUR RESULTS OF OPERATIONS IN
THE EVENT OF A SHORTFALL IN REVENUE. Our operating expenses are based in part on
our expectations of future revenue,  and expense levels are generally  committed
in advance of revenue.  Since only a small  portion of our expenses  varies with
revenue,  a shortfall  in revenue  translates  directly  into a reduction in net
income. If we are unsuccessful in generating  anticipated revenue or maintaining
expenses  within this range,  however,  our  business,  financial  condition and
results of operations could be materially adversely affected.

    SYNOPSYS HAS ADOPTED ANTI-TAKEOVER PROVISIONS,  WHICH MAY HAVE THE EFFECT OF
DELAYING  OR  PREVENTING  CHANGES OF CONTROL OR  MANAGEMENT.  We have  adopted a
number  of  provisions  that  could  have  anti-takeover  effects.  Our Board of
Directors has adopted a Preferred Shares Rights Plan,  commonly referred to as a
poison pill.  In addition,  our Board of Directors  has the  authority,  without
further action by its  stockholders,  to issue additional shares of Common Stock
and  to  fix  the  rights  and  preferences  of,  and to  issue  authorized  but
undesignated  shares of Preferred Stock. These and other provisions of Synopsys'
Restated  Certificate  of  Incorporation  and  Bylaws and the  Delaware  General
Corporation Law may have the effect of deterring  hostile  takeovers or delaying
or  preventing   changes  in  control  or  management  of  Synopsys,   including
transactions in which the  stockholders  of Synopsys might  otherwise  receive a
premium for their shares over then current market prices.

    SYNOPSYS IS SUBJECT TO CHANGES IN FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS,  WHICH MAY
AFFECT OUR  REPORTED  REVENUE,  OR THE WAY WE CONDUCT  BUSINESS.  We prepare our
financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted
in the United States of America (GAAP).  GAAP are subject to  interpretation  by
the Financial  Accounting  Standards Board, the American  Institute of Certified
Public  Accountants  (AICPA),  the SEC and  various  bodies  appointed  by these
organizations to interpret existing rules and create new accounting policies. In
particular,  a task force of the Accounting  Standards  Executive  Committee,  a
subgroup  of the AICPA,  meets on a  quarterly  basis to review  various  issues
arising   under  the  existing   software   revenue   recognition   rules,   and
interpretations of these rules.  Additional  interpretations  issued by the task
force  may have an  adverse  effect on how we  report  revenue  or on the way we
conduct our business in the future.




                                       38





ITEM 3. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURE ABOUT MARKET RISK

    Information relating to quantitative and qualitative disclosure about market
risk is set forth under the captions  "Interest Rate Risk" and "Foreign Currency
Risk" in Item 2, Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and
Results of Operations. Such information is incorporated herein by reference.






                                       39



                                   SIGNATURES

    Pursuant to the  requirements  of the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, the
registrant  has duly  caused  this  report  to be  signed  on its  behalf by the
undersigned thereunto duly authorized.

                                   SYNOPSYS, INC.

                                   By:   /S/ ROBERT B. HENSKE
                                        ---------------------
                                        Robert B. Henske
                                        Senior Vice President, Finance and
                                        Operations, and Chief Financial Officer
                                        (Principal Financial Officer)


                                        Date: September 20, 2002






                                       40






                                 CERTIFICATIONS


I, Aart J. de Geus, certify that:

1.       I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of Synopsys, Inc.;

2.       Based on my  knowledge,  this  quarterly  report  does not  contain any
         untrue  statement of a material  fact or omit to state a material  fact
         necessary to make the  statements  made, in light of the  circumstances
         under which such  statements  were made, not misleading with respect to
         the period covered by this quarterly report; and

3.       Based on my knowledge,  the financial  statements,  and other financial
         information  included in this quarterly  report,  fairly present in all
         material  respects the financial  condition,  results of operations and
         cash flows of the  registrant as of, and for, the periods  presented in
         this quarterly report.



Date: September 19, 2002


                                /S/ AART J. DE GEUS
                                -----------------------
                                Aart J. de Geus


                                CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
                                (PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICER)







                                       41






I, Robert B. Henske, certify that:

1.       I have reviewed this quarterly report on Form 10-Q of Synopsys, Inc.;

2.       Based on my  knowledge,  this  quarterly  report  does not  contain any
         untrue  statement of a material  fact or omit to state a material  fact
         necessary to make the  statements  made, in light of the  circumstances
         under which such  statements  were made, not misleading with respect to
         the period covered by this quarterly report; and

3.       Based on my knowledge,  the financial  statements,  and other financial
         information  included in this quarterly  report,  fairly present in all
         material  respects the financial  condition,  results of operations and
         cash flows of the  registrant as of, and for, the periods  presented in
         this quarterly report.



Date: September 19, 2002
                                /S/ ROBERT B. HENSKE
                                ----------------------
                                Robert B. Henske
                                CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER
                                (PRINCIPAL FINANCIAL OFFICER)




















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