This is a place holder article. It is one of the answers to
[Learning about electricity, the bright and colorful but not completely dumbed-down way?]
- Based on the way it is taught in engineering school, you are actually looking for about four textbooks.
- The physics of electricity is taught in an electricity and magnetism course (sometimes even from a physics textbook). RC and RLC circuits is taught in a circuit theory course. Op-Amps diodes and FETs are taught in an electronics course. Flip-flops and gates are taught in a computer organization course.
- All of the courses include more topics than you mention, but many topics can be ignored depending on your goals. Circuit theory is really a one course topic, the other three can be taken to great depth, even at the under-grad level. Finally, circuit theory is a prerequisite to electronics, and calculus is a prerequisite to all but the most basic understanding of any of it, otherwise they are actually quite independent topics.
- I duno if that is helpful, but I thought I would offer some context. Finally, similar questions have been asked before:
- [Fundamental Understanding of AV Electronics?]
- [I'm interested in learning electronics/electronics repair]
- [I want to learn how to make simple electronics]
- [Do Radio Shack's "50 in 1" electronic kits really teach EE skills?]
- [What are some good resources to learn about basic electricity?]
- And a couple of related, but more specific questions (well I've decided this doesn't really belong here, but since it is already typed out...):
- [Why are Capacitors so common in electrical circuits?]
- [Why so many AC adapters?]