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Understanding Periodicity of Sinusoidal Signals: Continuous-Time vs Discrete-Time Signals Periodicity is one of the most important concepts in Signals and Systems, and Digital Signal Processing (DSP). Many students know the formula \(T=\frac{2\pi}{\omega}\), but often get confused when similar questions appear in the context of discrete-time signals. In this article, we will clearly understand the difference between periodicity in continuous-time (analog) signals and discrete-time (digital) signals with examples and exam-oriented shortcuts. What is a Periodic Signal? A signal is said to be periodic if it repeats itself after a fixed interval. Continuous-Time (Analog) Signal A continuous-time signal \(x(t)\) is periodic if there exists a positive number \(T\) such that: \[ x(t+T)=x(t) \] The smallest positive value of \(T\) is called the fundamental period . Discrete-Ti...