On Thu, 20 Nov 2014 19:06:38 -0800, Bill Sloman wrote:> to develop the necessary competence.
> On Friday, 21 November 2014 11:56:21 UTC+11, Daniel Mandic wrote:
>> Is there any chance to get the solutions for the many exercises, found
>> through Chapter 1-15 of that brilliant electronics teaching book?
>
> Sure. Read the book carefully. Once you have understood what it's
> telling you, it's easy to work out the solutions to the exercises. If
> you are silly enough to look for another approach, you may take a while
Doing good so far.
Daniel: if you work through a problem and it makes sense to you, then
there's a really good chance you've done it right. If you work through a
problem and you just can't figure out if it's right or not, then feel free
to post questions here.
Don't sneer at an applicable Shaum's Outline or two, either -- they
contain lots of worked problems which you can use if you get stuck.
I've never seen anyone here volunteer to do anyone's homework, and it's
fairly common for one of us to turn down an opportunity with quite
intentionally pointed rudeness. However, there's quite a few people
(myself included) who are quite happy to HELP you with your homework, in a
way that won't give you the solution on a platter, but will perhaps point
you in the direction you need to go.
Just describe the problem (for AoE you may even be able to just cite
edition, chapter, and problem number), and where you're stuck. If where
you're stuck is that you don't have a clue of how to start -- say so.
And, since having money, family connections, and the ability to score
> - the book was aimed at Harvard
> undergraduates, and also works for Cambridge UK undergraduates, who form
> a similarly select group.
highly on the English composition portion of your SAT tests doesn't mean
squat for your ability to figure out electronic circuits, the OP should do
OK.
Now, if it were aimed at WPI or OSU (either one) undergrads, you should
quake in your boots.
And however much us ordinary mortals are supposed to bow and scrape when
we hear the names 'Haaahvahd' and 'Cambridge', it's still a book for the
Volts for Dolts class.
--
Tim Wescott
Wescott Design Services
http://www.wescottdesign.com
The Art Of Electronics -2nd Edition. The Art of Electronics Review - Part3 - Chapters 10 to 15 (mostly about digital electronics). Some links that will be useful after you watched the video are. I just bought the Art of Electronics 3rd Edition. I know close to 0 about EE, but I'm eager to learn. I spent like $150 American pesos on this paper weight to get a Cambridge-esque education and it doesn't have the answers to the exercises! Even worse, the Student Manual isn't even out yet!
Art Of Electronics Answers To Exercises
I'm reading through the Art of Electronics (Second Edition) and had trouble finding solutions online that I could compare my answers to and make sure I was doing things correctly. So, I figured, why not write up my own and people can point them out if they have problems with them. So far I just have the first 25 exercises up. Exercise 1.9 from 'The Art of Electronics' (Third Edition) « on: September 03, 2016, 09:02:22 am » I've been working through some of the exercises in the new third edition of 'The Art of Electronic', and exercise 1.9 is the first one that I'm not sure of my answer.