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by Tryffel 1216 days ago
So you want to learn electronics? I suggest that you take the time to actually learn the theory behind it and learn how resistance, capacitance, inductance affects the system. It is hard but helps a lot. If you want to understand digital systems, then learn how digital basic components work and how you combine them to create more complex systems. Had electronics as my major in my bachelor's degree, and the mental model is really important when it comes to electronics, and the only way to really understand it and get the correct mental model is by repeatedly analyzing the networks and the change over time (resistance,capacitance,inductance) and all of sudden it makes perfectly sense!
1 comments

Underlying theory is important, but seeing practical examples that _explicitly applies theory_ has been critical in my particular electronics adventure. There are more ways to apply Ohm's Law (or Kirchhoff's Laws) than you can shake a stick at and seeing someone explicitly do the math and apply it while explaining a circuit that I am interested in has helped me get better at applying it.

I think the hardest things for me so far been (a) getting my head around the idea that everything in a circuit is happening all at once (rather than iteratively like an algorithm) and (b) "input" and "output" are convenience terms, e.g. an opamp can sink current through its "output". Both of these insights have come from seeing real circuits analyzed on YouTube.