Number1
Diamond Member
- Feb 24, 2006
- 7,881
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Doesn't matter, unless your teacher is terrible at explaining things. Don't worry about making one huge equation, solve little parts of the circuit first.
I'm gonna assume you're taking physics 2. Circuits was the easiest part of both physics classes, except maybe optics.
It's an intro engineering course. http://img177.imageshack.us/img177/6380/notgood.jpg Most people in the class are not doing so hot. The grading is really annoying and the tests require more time than what you're given.
It's an engineering course. http://img177.imageshack.us/img177/6380/notgood.jpg Most people in the class are not doing so hot. The grading is really annoying and the tests require more time than what you're given.
This is week 2 of Intro to EE. If you're having trouble now, it should be concerning to you.
Granted, I struggle a bit in my intro to EE class (but not this soon) and then went on to do fine in the harder classes.
It's not that hard if it's explained well. >_>
We don't do enough examples in class for the topics we cover I think. I learn a lot better from examples.
It's an intro engineering course. http://img177.imageshack.us/img177/6380/notgood.jpg Most people in the class are not doing so hot. The grading is really annoying and the tests require more time than what you're given.
I really hope you aren't an EE. Even as a mechanical engineer that diagram was the equivalent of the square root of 4 in math.seriously? those are the easiest things ever
OH MY GOD, IS THAT BLACKBOARD?!?!?!?!?!?!?!
Fuck I hate blackboard
It's an intro engineering course. http://img177.imageshack.us/img177/6380/notgood.jpg Most people in the class are not doing so hot. The grading is really annoying and the tests require more time than what you're given.
arent you going to uw now? or you're at a CC?
but ya could also try brute forcing KCL at each node and going from there (apply test voltage and such)
