Analog Integrated Circuit Design
T**K
I wish I could rate this in the negative!
I noted that the reviewers who reviewed this book highly indicated they already knew the subject and worked in the field. This review is for students who do not already know the subject well.1) This should not really be listed as a "2nd Edition" - many schools automatically upgrade to 2nd edition books without reviewing them, and this book is unfortunately not as good as the 1st edition. Although it does contain a lot of the 1st edition in it, it also removes some of the helpful equations, while leaving in end-of-chapter questions requiring those equations.2) The chapters are very long, and full of equations, but do not have many explanations and don't seem to give enough information to answer the questions at the end of the chapter. For example, Chapter 1 is approximately 70 pages long with 186 equations in it, yet does not contain all the equations you need to know to do the end-of-chapter homework.3) The book has a lot of errors - there is an error page on the author's website, but it doesn't begin to cover all the errors. Supposedly errors were corrected two years before I bought my new book at full price, but it still had the errors. For example, there is a table in chapter 1 and in the back of the book - the same table, but some of the values are randomly different!4) This book keeps assuming you already know what it is supposedly teaching. I am not sure what the audience for this book would be. It says it is for graduate students, or upper-level undergraduates. However, if you know the subject well enough to follow what he is doing, you don't need the book. If you don't know it, you won't learn it from this. Things are very poorly explained, or it is often just assumed that you know some of the very things the chapter is supposed to teach you. Perhaps it is meant as a review book for someone who already learned all the subjects, and just needs some practice? This book is not for people who do not already have a thorough grasp of transistor modeling, transfer functions, Q-factor, etc. You can literally find better explanations anywhere.5) The homework questions, for which there are no answers, sometimes require information (on the subject theoretically being learned) not mentioned in the chapter. In cases where an example was given in the chapter, the example will be the simplest version possible with all values given, but the homework problem will be a complex version that requires additional knowledge (not covered in chapter), without many values. In order to do each homework question, I had to spend hours looking through supplementary books. For example, on the subject of bode plots, a first-order, real-pole, transfer function (already in the proper form) is used in the example. There is no mention of complex poles. In the homework, for the second question, you are given a transfer function in expanded form, that has complex poles. If you do not already understand that zeta will give you a little bump etc., you will not be able to do the problem. If you do already know that, then you wouldn't learn anything from the book by its treatment of this subject.The best thing I can say about this book is that it covers the right things in the right order, and contains a significant amount of equations. Unfortunately, it is very, very poorly written, and needs a thorough editing. If you are a teacher, you may wish to compare this book to the first edition, or to the many other options available. If you get stuck with this book as an undergraduate student, and you do not already have a pretty good background on this subject, get a supplement, or a few supplements.
O**E
A long wait, but worth it
I design analog/mixed signal circuits for a living. My colleagues and I have referred to the first edition of this book for 15 years now. We were all a bunch of excited nerds to learn a 2nd edition was coming out, and we weren't disappointed. New material, re-organized, as well as same helpful material that was in the first edition. I've seen negative reviews of the first edition and want to address them. This book is not meant to analyze things to death, and probably shouldn't be a student's only book on analog circuit design (perhaps accompanied by Gray Meyer Hurst and Lewis). But if you are a practicing engineer who wants access to the useful calculations and approximations for day-to-day design work, this is a great book. The authors know how to do world-class design for a living and give you efficient access to the practical knowledge you need to do the same. Really happy to see feedback and frequency response addressed as their own chapters, too!
L**N
New condition - came exactly as expected
Ordered this book for class! I appreciated the lower price than other places I found it, as well as it being brand new! Happy it came exactly as I expected.
F**X
some typos but in good condition
although the book has some typos, it correct them on its website and offers some good examples of the use of spice. but maybe the Gray and Meyer is a better choice
T**4
Great Analog Circuit Design book
It does have some repetitive topics throughout the chapters and could be a bit more concise at times. However, the examples in the book were instrumental to the success I had in my graduate course
D**N
Don't Believe the Book Condition Rating
I payed extra money to order a book that stated the text book condition was good rather than acceptable or bad. I received a textbook with the cover disconnected from the book.
A**N
Great book for Analog Circuit designs
Great book for Analog Circuit designs. It is not the most friendly for beginners, but more geared for engineers who already have introductory level knowledge of the material.
R**N
Five Stars
Was in good condition
A**S
Four Stars
As expected, thank you
A**D
Cover not as the image in ad.
Bad quality paper.
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