can /sci/ reccomend me a good book for electrical engineering with the following qualities:
1.) great for beginners
2.) covers significant breadth and depth on electrical and electronic circuits (digital and analog, analysis and design, theory (including maths) and practical application)
3.) lab exercises / practice problems
4.) clear explanations for a layperson (like, I have knowledge of calculus)
thanks, /sci/
Would be interested too
Third
Quattro.
Cinco.
>>8288403
There are no begginers when it comes to circuits.
If you're not automatically an expert by the time you open the book, you're already a failure and retard.
here
>>8288403
Art of Electronics
Bump. Is the Horowitz book real good?
>>8288828
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4-jbobSll4
>>8288828
I have it, it's not that great for a beginner. There's a lot of info there and it's very condensed. It seems to be a really good book but you kinda need to know the subject before reading it. It probably becomes useful after you have about a year of experience learning about electronics.
>>8288403
https://encrypted.google.com/#q=analog+seekrets+pdf
>>8288875
"This is a book on antenna theory for those who missed out on the RF design course. It is
a book on microwave theory for those who mainly use microwaves to cook TV dinners.
It is a book on electromagnetic theory for those who can’t confront electromagnetics
textbooks."
>>8288403 et al.
1st Edition -- the real file, 12MB, text book quality, 625 pages
www1.appstate.edu/~curtincm/sculpture/suppliers/gizmos/Practical_Electronics_for_Inventors.pdf
2nd Edition -- shitty scan 335MB, almost unusable
https://onlybooks.org/practical-electronics-for-inventors-2nd-edition-8243
>>8289229
just post the link yo
>>8289346
http://google.com/
http://stackexchange.com/
>>8289330
Here is the 4th edition in proper quality:
http://gen.lib.rus.ec/book/index.php?md5=F8742A49B3A1562E13CEDB9678EF6BDA
http://bookfi.net/dl/2258514/a5041b