That is precisely the same complaint I had when I got
my copy of AoE. It reminded me greatly of the old
circuits compendiums that McGraw Hill used to publish,
where they simply had every schematic tidbit they could
legally get their hands on published in a huge book.
It is nice to see how someone handled a problem, but
even nicer to get information on how a circuit came
to be.
Sometimes AoE(II) gets into it, and provides design
information, but mostly, it just shows circuits. When
it does get into the theory, it reads like a regurgitation
of Millman.
-Chuck Harris
Attila Kinali wrote:
Moin,
On Fri, 17 Apr 2015 08:12:52 +0000
"Poul-Henning Kamp" <[email protected]> wrote:
--------
In message <[email protected]>, Andrea Baldoni writes:
Hello.
In the case someone missed the new, after years of waiting, the third edition
of the book in the subject is out!
I received it last week, and yes, it's absolutely worth the money.
How does it compare to the gold standard of the Tietze&Schenk?
When i first got my hands on a TAoE a couple of years ago, i was
utterly disapointed. Compared to the T&S it contained hardly any
information. It looked rather like an listing of various circuits
with little explanation how to arrive on these circuits and how
to design those in.
Attila Kinali
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