Which is the best electronics online course?

Hi, I am hoping to learn a bit more about electronics engineering. I'd like to hear any recommendations of free electronics (or programming) courses. Any ideas? I know most things up to ohms law and a little more (which really isn't much!), but it isn't bad to review it! Thanks in advance.

Best

:thinking:

That is so subjective.


Look at YouTube.


Google will help.

Example

https://learn.sparkfun.com/tutorials/how-to-read-a-schematic/all


Go thru this tread, different levels of complexity:

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Dave Jones, who runs the popular, professional EEVBlog, has produced a good series of instructive Youtube videos.

This resistor problem is fun.

Yes.

You could do some nice projects for your hobby, like model railways or others.

Try applying for a scholarship in electronic engineering. Sometimes local community colleges are tuition free if you have certain qualifications.

Dave Jones. The high-timbered voice and every sentence ending with the uptick - pure torture.

Thanks to all of you for replying! I appreciate it greatly. I will look in to those tutorials. I'm not sure what you mean exactly, gilshultz, could you explain a little maybe? Thanks again!

I don't know much about on line courses so mush but the Khan Academy site is apparently decent.
A quick search finds this, but just enter electronic Engineering as a search parameter on that site.

A good reference book is The Art of Electronics Horowitz and Hill

I like Electronics Tutorials:

https://www.electronics-tutorials.ws/

A little technical for "beginner" but a lot of good information for a more serious hobbyist.

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Hi, thanks for your suggestions. I am currently using Khan Academy, and I like it. Ladatev, is this book you mentioned available on internet? And thanks, robertenc, I will look into that link. May God bless you all!

That book is not for beginners.

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The Art of Electronics is available on line and is one of our recommended book for students.
It takes you progressively through different aspects of electronics and is intended as a reference book to go alongside other ways of learning.
Khan Academy and other types of on line learning are decent, however a good reference book can be worth its weight when it comes to either aide memoir or further studying.

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I have a used copy of The Art of Electronics. I'm a hobbyist, and it gets deep quickly, but you can glean from it here and there, and it is a good resource.

Another reference that I use often is Op-Amps for Everyone:

https://web.mit.edu/6.101/www/reference/op_amps_everyone.pdf

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