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Electrical Engineering 101

Electrical Engineering 101

Everything You Should Have Learned in School...but Probably Didn't

by Darren Ashby

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Should I read this?

appears in Electronics Engineering and Electrical Engineering.

Electrical Engineering 101 covers the basic theory and practice of electronics, starting by answering the question What is electricity It goes on to explain the fundamental principles and components, relating them constantly to realworld examples. Sections on tools and troubleshooting give engineers deeper understanding and the knowhow to create...

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appears in Electronics Engineering and Electrical Engineering.

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Electrical Engineering
Try This Instead

Not sure if this is the right fit?

Consider Electrical Engineering by Clive Maxfield.

This is a dense, wide-ranging desk reference that reads like stitched-together chapters on circuits, signals, power, and practical design tips. It's most useful as a quick-lookup resource and a reminder of rules of thumb when you already know the basics; expect compact explanations, diagrams, and lots of factual detail. Limitation: it can feel uneven—some topics are terse, others long—and it doesn't handhold beginners or include hands-on exercises. Best used on the job or while studying for targeted problems rather than as a linear textbook.

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Electrical Engineering 101

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