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In illustration A above, a circuit is realized by the flow of current from the battery's negative terminal to its positive through a diode, a lamp, a resistor, a fuse. In illustration B above, a circuit is also realized by the flow of current from the battery's negative terminal to its positive through same components, although differently arranged. It is as if a necklace had been created out of electronic parts. (Understand, the string was not the wire in between the parts for the wire itself is a device; the string is the current.) Notice that if the diode's orientation had been not preserved, no current would flow, but that the other devices could be flipped without effecting the current flow. Some devices have a polarity that must be observed, if current is to flow through them, such as diodes, batteries, triodes, MOSFETs, some relays, and transistors; while others conduct regardless of orientation, such as resistors, fuses, tube heaters, chokes, wire, lamps, and even some FETs.
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