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Signals and Systems (2nd Edition)
 
 
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Signals and Systems (2nd Edition) (Hardcover)

~ (Author), (Author), with S. Hamid (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (57 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

The second edition of this well-known and highly regarded text can be used as the basis for a one- or two-semester undergraduate course in signals and linear systems theory and applications. Topics include basic signals and systems concepts, linear time-invariant (LTI) systems, Fourier representations of continuous-time and discrete-time signals, the CT and DT Fourier transforms, and time- and frequency-domain analysis methods. The author emphasizes applications of the theory through numerous examples in filtering, sampling, communications, and feedback. The parallel development of continuous-time and discrete-time frequency domain methods allows the reader to apply insights and intuition across the two domains. It also facilitates a deeper understanding of the material by bringing into focus the similarities and differences between the two domains. The text also includes introductory chapters on communication systems and control theory. This book assumes that you have a background in calculus as well as exposure to complex numbers and elementary differential equations. Because of its thoroughness and unhurried pace, this text is highly recommended for students and those interested in self-study.

Product Description

This comprehensive book of signals and systems develops continuous-time and discrete-time concepts/methods. Highly regarded for its intellectual quality, it provides a solid foundation and life-long reference for anyone studying the most important methods or modern signal and system analysis.

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Customer Reviews

57 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (57 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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29 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Many other reviews not fully objective???, November 6, 2001
I have just used this text in teaching a second-year Signals and Systems course. Yes -- the students have struggled with the course, and several of them have grumbled about the book. However, none of the adverse comments I've received about the book either from my students or other reviewers here seem to be valid. The possible exception is the lack of more worked examples or at least answers to end of chapter problems.

The book is an excellent basic introduction to the subject. It takes what can be a very difficult subject for students and provides a relatively clear path through the material. It doesn't assume very much mathematical background in the sense that there are plenty of very elementary problems in chapter one to remind you of the basics that you need for the rest of the book. Obviously if students have trouble with these problems they need to consider additional study to fill in some of the gaps in their knowledge on the mathematics side.

The worked examples in the chapters are excellent, although sometimes you have to ask yourself what you are supposed to be learning from each example or end of chapter problem. The first 20 problems at the end of each chapter really cover the chapter material, and subsequent problems delve into the material in a little more depth or in relation to more real-world problems. If you understand the chapter you should have no great difficulty in doing the first 20 problems in each chapter, and the answers are provided to help you make sure you aren't missing the point. I found some of the other problems a little less clear, and certainly the students had difficulties here. I provided well over a hundred pages of written solutions for my students to try to overcome this deficiency.

There is a solutions manual, but I don't recommend it all that highly. I found quite a lot of basic mistakes in the solutions manual. Several problems seemed to be done the "wrong way" compared to what I think the intention of the problem is. Also, some of the solutions in the solutions manual don't give enough guidance to students (at least not to the students I had in my course, and most likely not to many others judging by sorts of comments I've read in reviews here). On the other hand, I've probably made similar sorts of mistakes with the solutions I've provided, so I guess I can understand why the solutions manual has these deficiencies.

A few of the end of chapter problems (very, very few) didn't seem to have much point. Some seemed to involve a lot of work, for not much instructive gain. However, the large majority of problems are excellent and highly instructive.

As with all books there are possibly things which could be improved, but overall this book is excellent in terms of being a good basic introductory text for a Signals and Systems course. Such a course is something that many students are going to find difficult, but the book isn't to blame if that's the case.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable but sometimes unclear, March 20, 2007

This is one of my favorite books I've covered in my undergraduate degree.

I've noticed several previous reviewers have critisized this book based on clearly false assumptions. Clarification must be done for non-EEs:

This book, along others titled ' Signals and Systems' is intended as a preliminary to the 'systems' part of electrical engineering in general(namely Communications, Signal Processing, and Control). Hence it's not a book on standard DSP (the author has two other books that are specifically entitled Digital Signal Processing and Discrete time signal processing).

What's more, since this book was designed specifically as an introduction for sophomore and junior engineering students, one cannot expect this book to go into lebesgue2 space, inner-products, bounded-operators and the like. Certainly oppenheim didn't have functional analysts in mind when he wrote this book! The mathematically inclined reader should aim for 'Signal Analysis: Time, Frequency ,Scale, and Structure' by Allen and Mills.

As for the typical reader of this book, I think it is well written and the equations are very well motivated. The author repeats the difficult and essential concepts several times here and there, which is very useful for the new comers into the field, although I do agree with reveiwers that said the book needs some adjustments in terms of examples, which are sometimes trivial and sometimes confusing.

I believe the book needs to be updated by the author sometime. The book lacks computer problems and examples, which would be very helpfull for students to visualize what's going on.

hope this was useful!
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent introduction to the topic, June 25, 2003
Having had this book for 2 semesters in a Signals and Systems course, I can say that it has done its job in presenting an in-depth and clear introduction to the topic. It is well-written, structured, comprehensive and has lots of challenging (and not so) exercises and examples.

A few comments on the latter: it seemed to me that the first 20 basic exercises at the end of each chapter were very basic, of the type "plug-in the formula from the table on the previous page", while the subsequent problems, especially the advanced ones, are way above the level of the former. Working out through those was meticulous, hard and very lengthy as compared to the basic stuff (the solutions provided by our instructor were of the order 1-2 typed pages per problem). Providing answers or at least general strategies would have been tremendously helpful. I am aware that there is a solutions manual, however the textbook itself is expensive enough.

The information was presented clearly, but I liked our professor's introduction to convolution more that the book's coverage. The sampling chapter was, at least to me and some of my fellows, a bit confusing and we had to, again, rely more on class notes.

Overall this is a good book, albeit very-very expensive (I was lucky enough to get a cheap Indian reprint).

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars Useless
This book just contains tables of formulas and horrible descriptions. It doesn't help you understand signals and systems at all. Read this book if you love memorizing things.
Published 2 months ago by Adam the Great

1.0 out of 5 stars Signals and Systems (2nd Edition)
The seller is terrible. I never received my book and I emailed the seller three times and he never even responded to me. Don't buy from this seller!
Published 4 months ago by Brandon Becker

5.0 out of 5 stars Good Book
I got this book for my class and so far so good. The book explains it well and equations are easy enough to find.
Published 5 months ago by Christopher Karman

3.0 out of 5 stars Signals & Systems
The condition of the book was okay but the seller forgot to mention what the edition of the book is! However,the shipping time was good.
Published 11 months ago by S. Nawaz

2.0 out of 5 stars Signals and Systems 2e review
This text is a little murky. There are not a lot of examples demonstrating all of the different cases. Read more
Published 12 months ago by Jason A. Lindsey

2.0 out of 5 stars Very Unhappy
I just took a class that required this book and I found it to be incredibly unhelpful. I thought the explanations were poor and the examples weren't worked out fully and... Read more
Published 14 months ago by Taylor B. Hellar

5.0 out of 5 stars Very Good Book
I am an Aerospace graduate student reading this book on my own time and pace (not taking the undergrad Electrical Engineering class that teaches/uses this book). Read more
Published 18 months ago by Cyrus

2.0 out of 5 stars Not concise, not enough examples!
I have struggled through two classes utilizing this book, so I feel I do have a good sense of the material in it. Read more
Published 20 months ago by Melissa B. Chen

4.0 out of 5 stars very useful item!
This book explain very clear what are differences about Fourier and Laplace Transform. Eventhough, those transform appears in the same range of time. Read more
Published 21 months ago by Kittipong Tripetch

3.0 out of 5 stars A (long) undergrad text. Not a reference. Not a grad text.
Amazon's editorial reviews are correct. Don't be deceived into thinking that this is anything other than an introduction for the complete novice. Read more
Published on October 19, 2007 by G. Pajer

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