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|    sci.electronics.basics    |    Elementary questions about electronics    |    72,318 messages    |
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|    Message 70,851 of 72,318    |
|    jurb6006@gmail.com to All    |
|    Terminology    |
|    19 Dec 18 21:46:29    |
      You may have seen me rail against how the schools teach that inversion is the       same thing as 180 degrees out. Out of phase, by definition or etymology or       whatever the fuck at least strongly implies that THIS signal is THAT signal       but has gone though        something that has delayed it by ½ its period.               Now, these two waveforms, say applied to a CRO (and ALWAYS own a CRO as long       as you shall live) and syncing, they look the same as long as they are       symmetrical. But we have two types of symmetrical.               Consider:              ¯|_|¯|_|¯|_|¯|_|¯|_|¯|_|              /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\              And:              /|/|/|/|/|/|/|/|/|/|/|/|/|              Or as my Wavtek will put out:              /|_/|_/|_/|_/|_/|_/|_/|_/|              With a dead time that is half the sawtooth wave.               Now, we should all know this, it is not that hard of a concept. But how is it       expressed ?               If I was the word chooser of the world, a sawtooth wave would be called       "Symmetrical in period" but NOT "Symmetrical in polarity".               What are the proper terms for that ?              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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