| Electronics > Beginners |
| Book advice electronics theory and pratics |
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| rstofer:
--- Quote from: tggzzz on April 11, 2019, 10:31:53 am ---Manufacturer's application notes. The Art of Electronics III. Those should get you going; then you can ask more specific questions. --- End quote --- There a LOT to learn from application notes. But they won't be in a bound volume and they won't all be from one manufacturer. I'm not sure what to think about The Art of Electronics. I have it but I haven't spend enough time with it to really appreciate the approach. So, we can spend an entire semester working with analog circuits and op amps while learning nothing about FPGAs. And that's the point! The 'universe' of electronics is pretty large. The idea of 'building blocks' sounds good but what if the input and output parameters aren't compatible with another block. Not understanding the design of the bits and pieces makes integration difficult. Electronics, as a whole, is hard! That's why it takes 150 units of coursework spread over 5 years to even begin to get a handle on it. And then there is grad school where the focus is more limited but the depth is increased. |
| tggzzz:
--- Quote from: rstofer on April 11, 2019, 05:00:52 pm --- --- Quote from: tggzzz on April 11, 2019, 10:31:53 am ---Manufacturer's application notes. The Art of Electronics III. Those should get you going; then you can ask more specific questions. --- End quote --- There a LOT to learn from application notes. But they won't be in a bound volume and they won't all be from one manufacturer. It isn't for an absolute beginner. I'm not sure what to think about The Art of Electronics. I have it but I haven't spend enough time with it to really appreciate the approach. So, we can spend an entire semester working with analog circuits and op amps while learning nothing about FPGAs. And that's the point! The 'universe' of electronics is pretty large. The idea of 'building blocks' sounds good but what if the input and output parameters aren't compatible with another block. Not understanding the design of the bits and pieces makes integration difficult. Electronics, as a whole, is hard! That's why it takes 150 units of coursework spread over 5 years to even begin to get a handle on it. And then there is grad school where the focus is more limited but the depth is increased. --- End quote --- Just so. TAoE is unrivalled in it area - that of taking a physics/electronics graduate and outlining what works well in practice, and why. A different tack was taken by John Markus with his weighty tomes (remember them?) which I suspect can be found for free nowadays. I always disliked them since there was little curation in the selection, the circuits and their limitations weren't explained. |
| Kagord:
>>Shock >> >>The thread below describes what I wanted, if you can think of any source not provided let me know. >>https://www.eevblog.com/forum/beginners/circuit-building-blocks-for-absolute-beginners/ Eye Candy Here... http://lushprojects.com/circuitjs/ |
| Shock:
Though it's not in book forum, the Falstad circuit simulator examples are probably the best I've seen. |
| Yaroooo:
I've also found this: https://www.abebooks.it/Practical-Electronics-Inventors-2E-Paul-Scherz/22825293443/bd?cm_mmc=gmc-_-new-_-PLA-_-v01&gclid=EAIaIQobChMImMuPuYLK4QIVTuJ3Ch3BZACqEAQYASABEgKXtvD_BwE What do you think about it? |
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