Thanks for sharing. These are really good advices.
I stopped dabbing into electronics last year due to lack of time, and I'm absolutely sure this is one of the reasons I was scratching my head:
> - learn how to translate between schematics and breadboards. Nowadays there are many breadboard-illustrations that show you exactly how to connect things. That is neat, but ot is hard to reason about circuits that way, and this will be needed once you deciate from what you find. Most interesting circuits will come as schematics anyways, so learning it is worth it
I found it particularly hard to translate if the schematics uses multiple grounds and single line power sources. I found it difficult to figure out whether the components are linked serially or parallel.
I stopped dabbing into electronics last year due to lack of time, and I'm absolutely sure this is one of the reasons I was scratching my head:
> - learn how to translate between schematics and breadboards. Nowadays there are many breadboard-illustrations that show you exactly how to connect things. That is neat, but ot is hard to reason about circuits that way, and this will be needed once you deciate from what you find. Most interesting circuits will come as schematics anyways, so learning it is worth it
I found it particularly hard to translate if the schematics uses multiple grounds and single line power sources. I found it difficult to figure out whether the components are linked serially or parallel.