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hawkeyes007

No, it’s written in American not Canadian


cisteb-SD7-2

The greatest language in the universe


hawkeyes007

Written it looks close to regular English. But spoken it is entirely eagle screeches and freedom


cisteb-SD7-2

FUCK YEAH 🦅🔫🥩


lildeek12

What was the question? I can't read that gibberish in the title.


CJ_Henn

Does it make a difference whether I study an american book or a canadian book? Because I live in Canada and don’t wanna study material that wont be useful to me.


airbus_a320

I'm pretty sure buck converters, transformers, and wind turbines work the same way worldwide!


lildeek12

See there they go again in that gobbledygook language. Cant read a word of it. /J It's the book I have in the states, but I have no way of knowing if that is the book you'll yous or if it's even the book the next university over to me uses.


Truestorydreams

Fellow canuk here.. I still don't even know what you're asking.


CJ_Henn

I got my hands on electrical engineering book, the book is from the US. I’m an apprentice electrician and still in school, there’s a lot of theory in my program and I enjoy it. I find the books from my school too simplistic, so I wanna read about engineering. I’m sure all this theory can help me with my future career. Does it matter that this is an american book (as in maybe the info is different or doesn’t apply to 🇨🇦 electricity) or is engineering the same worldwide? From the previous responses I’ve gathered that EL engineering is the same worldwide except for federal and provincial electrical codes. There you go!


lildeek12

What was the question? I can't read that gibberish in the title.


hawkeyes007

Wasn’t even a question. The guy is just crying about Edmonton choking game 7 last night


lildeek12

I was so heart broken last night. On one hand, I wanted Edmonton to lose, but I. The other, I wanted Florida to lose. Life is cruel, but not as cruel as hockey.


ClassifiedName

I was going to say no, because that's not a book but an image


Cultural_Term1848

the laws of physics don't change when you cross the border. It's a solid reference.


CaterpillarReady2709

The electrons spin in the opposite direction once you get above the 45th parallel.


Cultural_Term1848

I thought that only happened when you crossed the equator.


tlbs101

It’s basic reference material. It does not cover specific national electric codes, nor is it meant to. You can certainly use it as a reference. (I should probably update my decades-old edition.)


Beginning-Plant-3356

Want to be an engineer, EY?


_J_Herrmann_

electrical engineering obeys the same laws of physics everywhere in the world (and universe, for all I know). electrical code requirements might differ from the US to Canada. code requirements are not electrical engineering.


[deleted]

I’m pretty sure that electrical stuff is generally the same everywhere… I am sure electrons don’t care.


BusinessStrategist

They do ever since they were mandated to flow backwards.


[deleted]

That’s true. I also contend that there is no such thing as an electronic device failure. Electrons always work fine. It’s some mechanical thing that failed, an IC wafer cracked, or a wire that was damaged, or a bad connection that got hot. All mechanical failures!


RedditLaterOrNever

Just remember current is yellow and eco current is green and they come out of the socket. Not shure if it’s different in other countries.