I am working through The Art of Electronics 3rd Edition. I was hoping to be able to check my answers after working through exercises. However, I could find no published list of solutions to the problems.
So far, it only contains some 20-odd solutions for exercises in Chapter 1, and the list is admittedly growing slowly. It would be cool to see this open-source solution manual grow through academic work (undegraduates or grad students could be assigned writing up solutions as part of their coursework or it could count towards some credits or something). Getting some professors to incentivize graduate EE students to write up problem solutions would be a neat way of developing this document to completion.
It would be great. For some reason I’ve been able to find the first 20 questions answered for like five years on the internet! But never anything more.
Is it ethical to post answers like this for a text book?
This is fantastic timing! I have just started [a project](https://github.com/OpenTextbookSolutions/open-textbook-solutions) to open source solutions for all textbooks. I would love it if you would be able to commit what you have to the repo! It would be a massive help, and service. I am fully able to work with you to get it all uploaded.
EDIT: Actually I see that you have it hosted with an MIT license, so if it’s alright with you, I would love to clone what you have and implement it into my project!
I am working through The Art of Electronics 3rd Edition. I was hoping to be able to check my answers after working through exercises. However, I could find no published list of solutions to the problems.
However, I did find a crowd-sourced collection of solutions written up in LaTeX! https://github.com/milesdai/TAoE3Solutions (click on the .pdf file).
So far, it only contains some 20-odd solutions for exercises in Chapter 1, and the list is admittedly growing slowly. It would be cool to see this open-source solution manual grow through academic work (undegraduates or grad students could be assigned writing up solutions as part of their coursework or it could count towards some credits or something). Getting some professors to incentivize graduate EE students to write up problem solutions would be a neat way of developing this document to completion.
It would be great. For some reason I’ve been able to find the first 20 questions answered for like five years on the internet! But never anything more.
Is it ethical to post answers like this for a text book?
This is fantastic timing! I have just started [a project](https://github.com/OpenTextbookSolutions/open-textbook-solutions) to open source solutions for all textbooks. I would love it if you would be able to commit what you have to the repo! It would be a massive help, and service. I am fully able to work with you to get it all uploaded.
EDIT: Actually I see that you have it hosted with an MIT license, so if it’s alright with you, I would love to clone what you have and implement it into my project!