Thomas L. Floyd’s Principles of Electric Circuits is a standard textbook in electronics education. The "Conventional Current" version assumes that current flows from the positive terminal of the voltage source, through the circuit, and back to the negative terminal (as opposed to electron flow, which moves from negative to positive).
For over three decades, engineering students and electronics enthusiasts have turned to one textbook as their gold standard for understanding the invisible world of electrons. That textbook is by Thomas L. Floyd. Thomas L
At the heart of the city was a giant Water Pump , representing the Battery . In the Conventional Current version of the story, we imagine the water flowing out of the "High Pressure" (Positive) side and back into the "Low Pressure" (Negative) side. The pressure this pump creates is called Voltage —it’s the "push" that gets everything moving. For over three decades, engineering students and electronics
) and (Current and Voltage) serve as the analytical bedrock, enabling the calculation of unknowns in series and parallel networks. At the heart of the city was a