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What kind of math is introduced in this answer:

https://dsp.stackexchange.com/a/40225/30897

It smells like standard linear algebra course (which I haven't studied, yet), but is it only that? Thanks!

Krushe
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    Introduction to Digital Communications would probably be the most fitting. CDMA is a digital comms concept (chips, orthogonal signals, etc). TDMA can be understood in layman's terms. Frequency concepts for FDMA should be covered in circuits or linear systems courses. – thomas.cloud Feb 28 '18 at 19:38
  • @thomas.cloud thanks! I understand TDMA and FDMA in layman's terms but I'm more interested in math topics which would give me rigorous thinking about these concepts just like in that answer – Krushe Feb 28 '18 at 19:59
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    Some sort of advanced linear systems would probably be helpful too. – thomas.cloud Feb 28 '18 at 20:58
  • @Krushe Dilip is a "retired professor of electrical and computer engineering with a lifetime of experience teaching probability and statistics to reluctant engineering undergraduates.", so one day, in a couple of decades, you might be there too. – Harry Svensson Mar 01 '18 at 06:29
  • @HarrySvensson so, what is your point? – Krushe Mar 01 '18 at 09:24
  • Linear algebra is the basis behind linear system and most (linear time-invariant) basic DSP topics/courses. IIRC, I needed linear algebra even for my undergrad circuits and systems course. – hotpaw2 Mar 01 '18 at 09:34
  • @Krushe Hmm, I tried to imply that that kind of knowledge will come naturally as you progress through your life and jobs. - I think my comment was a little bit off. – Harry Svensson Mar 02 '18 at 02:39

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