If you had to choose between learning about Analog or Digital electronics, which would you choose and why?

Quote one of my best profs,

"I've had many arguments about this, and that's how I like it, but there is no such thing as digital. Show me a perfect square wave and I'll give you all my money and everything else I own."

There is no such thing as digital and if you see your designs as digital and analog you're going to have a bad time. While will this configuration program at 115200 baud and this one at 921600? Why is this one wire bus just useless? Open drain, open what now?

It sounds like the difference is your capstone project. I specialized in analog integrated circuit design and now am a product engineer. Look into the profs, meet them, etc and go from there. For the analog to digital from what you've described. Better know the basics of spinning a board.

From the digital to analog, you'd better know how transistors work. If you don't you aren't any kind of EE or ECE.

Don't get hung up on the description. Learn to program while you learn Ohms lay. You and math don't have a like relationship, you have a love. Critical thinking is key. Push yourself.

EMC compliance are also treated in depth.

There couldn't be anything more analog than EMC compliance.

/r/ECE Thread