Comment by πŸš€ Analog_Guy

Re: "What is analog computing? The basic idea is there is some…"

In: u/Analog_Guy

In practice, the three most commons problems I have are (1) forgetting one of the patch cables while building a circuit, (2) my oscilloscope lead is not attached securely, and (3) I have my oscilloscope connected to the wrong output, so I'm seeing bad data and don't understand why.

πŸš€ Analog_Guy [OP]

2025-12-29 Β· 4 months ago

4 Later Comments ↓

πŸš€ stack Β· Dec 29 at 18:04:

As someone who has done much software but also a lot of hardware including high-speed digital PCB design, I have to say that analog circuits scare me stiff. I've seen things.

πŸš€ Analog_Guy [OP] Β· Dec 29 at 19:56:

The discussion is clouded by ambiguity. "Analog" is usually taken to mean "continuous" vs. discrete. It also can mean "analogue" β€” similarity β€” a form of computing where the computational system is a physical analogue to the computation being performed.

An analog computer can be made of digital components. Digital Differential Analyzers (see Wikipedia) were used for a short time in the late 60s. The compute components were digital, and were clocked together. But they were distinct computational units that were patched together to make a circuit mirroring the computation. They could do some things traditional electronic analog computers could not do, but were more esoteric to operate.

πŸš€ stack Β· Dec 29 at 21:02:

I've never heard of 'analog computing' used as in modeling some behavior. Have you really?

πŸš€ Analog_Guy [OP] Β· Dec 29 at 21:32:

Professor Ulmann gives a similar explanation in his book, "Analog Computing", ISBN 978-3110787610. I do not have the book on hand, right now, or I would try to give a better reference. I believe he also pointed out that analog computing does not mean "non-discrete" as even electronic analog computers are computationally discrete down at the electron level.

The core idea is that there is a physical analogue between the computation and the computational device. "Modeling some behavior" is not exactly the same thing as that, although modeling behavior was a very common use of electronic analog computers. Slide rules are analog computing devices, but they do not really model or simulate any system.

Original Post

πŸš€ Analog_Guy

What is analog computing? The basic idea is there is some physical analog between the computing device and the computing to be performed. A slide rule is a non-electronic computing device in which the analog is physical distances on logarithmic scales. A traditional electronic analog computer represents values as varying voltages which are feed through computing elements like integrators and multipliers.

πŸ’¬ 17 comments Β· 2025-12-24 Β· 4 months ago