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| quote: | Originally posted by Omega_M
There is another way to learn the concepts you know. SOLVE THE EXAMPLE PROBLEMS. There are literally hundreds of them peppered through out the book. Plus books provide answers to many exercise problems at the end. Bottom line --- you don't need a solution manual for the reasons you've just stated. |
if you're taking classes like college algebra and trig, yes, the examples are enough. but when you're dealing with highly complex RLC circuits and two stage bjt amplifiers... you need more than a couple examples.
i have books that are 1300+ pages, and for some kinds of problems theres a max of 2 example problems. you put a resistor, or another independent or dependent source in a weird place, and BOOOOOM you've got to approach the problem in a completely different manner.
just out of curiosity, whats the highest level math you've taken? because obviously you have no clue what you're taking about. you're just arguing with me cuz you're bored at work probably.
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