Linear Integrated Circuits By Roy Choudhary Fourth Edition Top Official
| Feature | Roy Choudhary (4th Ed) | Gayakwad | Sedra & Smith | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | High (Transistor level for 741) | Medium | Very High (Graduate level) | | Problem variety | Excellent (Exam-oriented) | Good | Moderate | | Cost (International) | Low (Indian edition is very affordable) | Medium | High | | Focus on linear ICs exclusively | Yes (Pure analog) | Yes | No (Mixed with digital/BJT/MOSFET) | | Best for | Undergraduate exams & GATE | Undergraduate lab work | Graduate design |
In the vast ocean of engineering textbooks, few have achieved the cult status of Linear Integrated Circuits by D. Roy Choudhary and Shail B. Jain. Now in its fourth edition, this book continues to dominate the shelves of electrical and electronics engineering students, competitive exam aspirants, and even practicing circuit designers. | Feature | Roy Choudhary (4th Ed) |
Analog fundamentals do not age. The concept of virtual ground, CMRR (Common Mode Rejection Ratio), and slew rate remain unchanged in modern ICs. If you understand Roy Choudhary’s analysis of a 741, you can design with an OPA277 (a modern precision op-amp) effortlessly. Now in its fourth edition, this book continues