Hello , everyone! Recently I’ve bought the arduino board with the arduino breadboard syb 46 https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B4BDjp … sp=sharing.
The problem is I don’t understand how to use it. I can’t understand the scheme of this model of breadboard, where is plus and minus, where is ground , etc. I’ve already watched a lot videos about arduino breadboards on youtube but I found no videos about this arduino breadboard model
I 'm asking about help, because the absence of needed information very frustrates me
so I can’t begin to work on arduino 
Thanks in advance!
It looks to me to be a common solderless breadboard.
https://learn.sparkfun.com/tutorials/ho … breadboard
Am I missing something obvious ?
It seems to me that you’re missing the fact that the commonly used breadboards have two power rails . For example, in the post you shared me we can see a breadboard with two power rails
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B4BDjp … sp=sharing
But my breadboard has just one power rail.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B4BDjp … sp=sharing
That confuses me extremely 
vyacheslav_serkov:
It seems to me that you’re missing the fact that the commonly used breadboards have two power rails . For example, in the post you shared me we can see a breadboard with two power rails
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B4BDjp … sp=sharing
That board has 4 rails, 2 on each side.
But my breadboard has just one power rail.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B4BDjp … sp=sharing
That confuses me extremely 
That board has 2 rails, one on each side.
Is that so hard to figure out
Secondly, why would you buy a board that confuses you?
vyacheslav_serkov:
It seems to me that you’re missing the fact that the commonly used breadboards have two power rails . For example, in the post you shared me we can see a breadboard with two power rails
But my breadboard has just one power rail.
That confuses me extremely 
Well it still works the same as the other one, just with less access to it's "power" rails. Given that a lot of circuits only use 1 supply voltage and ground, it's not that limiting. But if you have a circuit that needs multiple voltages either get a BB with multiple rails or dedicate an unused row (or 2) to be a power "rail". Then the wires just go to a different physical location.