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Signals and Systems: Continuous and Discrete (4th Edition)

Signals and Systems: Continuous and Discrete (4th Edition)

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Authors: Rodger E. Ziemer, William H Tranter, D. R. Fannin
Publisher: Prentice Hall
Category: Book

List Price: $147.00
Buy Used: $47.97
You Save: $99.03 (67%)



New (18) Used (24) from $47.97

Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 14 reviews
Sales Rank: 68159

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 4
Pages: 608
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.6
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.1 x 1.5

ISBN: 013496456X
Dewey Decimal Number: 621.3822
EAN: 9780134964560

Publication Date: February 20, 1998
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
A market leader in previous editions, this book continues to offer a complete survey of continuous and discrete linear systems. It utilizes a systems approach to solving practical engineering problems, rather than using the framework of traditional circuit theory. Numerous examples from circuit theory appear throughout, however, to illustrate the various systems techniques introduced. The Fourth Edition has been thoroughly updated to effectively integrate the use of computers and to accurately reflect the latest theoretical advances.


Customer Reviews:   Read 9 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars One of the better signals and systems books   March 10, 2005
Carey Witkov (Florida)
4 out of 6 found this review helpful

Unlike texts that read like they have been compiled by cutting and pasting, this one reads like the authors are directly talking to you.
Some things I like about this text:

* It does not omit the hard stuff, like the inversion integral for laplace transforms so you don't have to rely only on transform tables.
* It includes topics not often found in introductory signals and systems texts like the chirp-z transform.
* It has several worked examples for each section and shows how to perform the calculations both by hand and using matlab.
* The end-of-chapter problems are doable.
* The approach taken in the text is a general systems approach and not a narrow circuits approach.

While everyone's entitled to their opinion many of the negative reviews appeared to be critical without substance.



5 out of 5 stars Makes You Love Communication   September 28, 2001
Zaher Kassas (USA, DE)
7 out of 11 found this review helpful

I was really surprised by some of the negative comments written on this book, and that is why I decided to write this comment. This book was the one assigned to the undergraduate course I took entitled Signals and Systems. In fact, this book made me like communications and signal processing, and I believe that it motivated me a lot (beside the other book by Ziemer & Tranter entitled Principles of Communication Systems: Modulation, Noise, Systems, 4th edition) to go for the graduate studies in communications and signal processing. What I liked about the two books was that they assume NO prior knowledge of the topics covered and they move on smoothly from one subject to another so that the student will have a better understanding of the "big picture" as he/she moves on. Well, I guess that the other "negative" comments about this book were written by students who expected to understand the topics covered in this book from one skim read. Let me say that that is NOT the case here. In order to understand the topics covered very well, you should read them more than once and try to solve as many problems as possible. But trust me on this: once you do so, you will grasp the material very well and will have a "feel" of what is going on.


5 out of 5 stars I absolutely agree!   January 29, 2007
Alan J. Ross
4 out of 7 found this review helpful

I absolutely agree with Carey Witkov and Zaher Kassas, while completely disagreeing with most of the other reviews.

To learn formalized disciplines, any of them, from Signal Theory to Microeconomics to Fluid Dynamics to whatever you want, there is only *one* way: you *must* sit there, in front of the book, with your pencil and/or ballpen and your block of paper (white, if possible: since lines and squares tend to make you lose your concentration), and you have to spend your time, all the time you need, to go deeply through the ideas the book is trying to convey. In other words, *you-have-to-write*! Furthermore, you possibly (not necessarily: but, imho, it would nevertheless help very much) will have to derive yourself again *all* the formal deductions the authors use for arguing their theses: especially the obscure or hard ones. You'll have to, or at least you'll better try...

Of course, to get to all of these things, you have to be patient and to spend all the time you need until you'll be sure you actually have understood what you read. And how can you be sure you actually have? Simple: close the book, and try to sistematically rephrase and/or reformulate on your own what you've read, forcing yourself to *write* your personal deductions (especially the ones about the hard points) down on your nice block of white paper with your nice ballpen or pencil. And when you come to a point where you can't, you have to go back to your book and read the point again, patiently trying to understand *where*, in the pages before the hard point, something has gone wrong or the stream of logico-formal deductions of the author(s) has stopped flowing into your head, or has broken up along the way from the page to your mind. Could all these efforts require you to read other books, or look for more information in other places? Of course it could: otherwise, what kind of research activity would it be? For we must be clear: seriously studying a matter (*any* matter) IS a research activity.

Trying to learn (read) something which is formally structured and/or organized in an abstract fashion just like you would do if you were reading a novel simply doesn't work. You just *can't* learn mathematics (and all that) only by browsing through the books as if they were comics: and just reading and reciting in aloud voice isn't enough, if one really wants to grasp the essence, or the logic structure, of what one is reading.

Only after having subdued to such a discipline (yes: I think we just can call it so) one has the right to come here, or wherever else, and demolish a treatise. Never before! We're not talking about novels and science fiction ;)

Let me add a final consideration (which is general: that is, it applies more or less to the whole Amazon bookstore): this is the reason why, in my humble opinion, this whole system of allowing everybody to rate the books at his/her absolute discretion tends, in the very end, to be completely useless. Here, too, one should make any attempt, if anything, to separate his/her own personal experience - and maybe his/her own disgust for having been forced to study a specific tome just in order to pass an exam - from some kind of objective judgement. Otherwise, it's nothing more than a whining complaint.

Sorry ^___~

______________________________________
P.S. [30/01/2007] Then, there is the fact that this book, like most of the other books published by the five or six ultra-mega-global multimedia corporations (I mean: Springer - Kluwer, McGraw-Hill, and so on... you know the list) are *waaaay* too costly. *This* would be a real matter for an actual (and maybe also effective) campaign. Though, it's a completely different story ;)



3 out of 5 stars Good, but limited number of example problems   May 3, 1999
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Text is somewhat difficult to read compared to similar titles. Author frequently only solves problems with a "twist" then only offers a limited number of problems at the end of the chapter.


3 out of 5 stars S&S C&D 4th Reveiw   September 19, 2008
D. Parry (Chicago)
This book is good resource for this class as it has many examples and helpful Matlab coded examples. However for someone that is taking this course with no previous experience in to signals and/or system with average calculus skills, it will be very challenging. I would suggest a book that subscribes to a more basic level.

 
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