I'm new to this electronics thing and recently came across Conventional Current. So, I hear Conventional Current travels from positive to negative due to misleading scientific evidence some 100 years ago. I also hear most schematics use conventional current as well. My question, How does this conventional current work? If someone makes a schematic according to conventional current, wouldn't that mean they would have to flip around all the diodes and such? How can you build a circuit based of a schematic that is backwards? A diode can pass current 1 direction. If a schematic using CC has the diode facing one way, then how can the REAL current go through it?
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