thanks for the rstofer analysis: we understood that 1032 might be fine for me, it is still a fairly expensive purchase; we must also calculate that it would have a reduced use compared to the oscilloscope, and perhaps for a beginner it could be perhaps even too expensive. However, I see that there are not many products at a much lower cost, if not the usual fy6900 ...
I should start to understand: Will it have a lot of use in my troubleshooting repairs?
It would also be necessary to understand with what amplitude it can come out with the signal, and if it is sufficient to test parts of the circuit: obviously enough within 15v ..
I managed to get along without an AWG for more than 60 years, nearly 50 since I finished undergrad. I always played with digital and all I needed was a decent square wave of an appropriate frequency. It's only since I started hanging out here that I have moved toward more 'educational' topics.
Then again, I haven't had a bench power supply either. 5V fixed supplies were adequate and my robotics projects have always been battery powered.
I bought a couple of used bench DMMs from eBay just because they could sit on a shelf above the bench, out of the workspace. Handheld meters, of which I have several, seem to get in the way. I still use the handhelds far more often...
We have spent days talking about FFT but I have used it exactly once in my entire career. Do I really care is the DSO can display it? Probably not! Of course, since modern DSOs already have it, I might as well learn how it works. I still don't have a use for the FFT and likely never will other than 'learning' topics around here.
Troubleshooting? Troubleshooting what? Most manufactured gadgets defy repair. Among other things, you probably can't even get the custom chips. Even some Tektronix scopes become impossible to repair. I must be in a different place because I can't imagine troubleshooting anything other than a project I built. Is a signal generator useful? Not to me! Everything I do is digital, whether Arduino, Raspberry Pi, ARM or FPGAs. I need a scope, I probably need a logic analyzer and that's about it.
Truth told, I don't need much of the bench equipment I have. The Analog Discovery 2 can handle everything I do. The Digital Discovery 2 is probably a better tool for pure digital but it doesn't have a scope feature. Nevertheless, I have both and I use them more than any of my bench equipment. Cheaper too!
I'm also certain that there are others around here who spend more time with audio or analog and less with digital. Electronics covers a pretty wide field and there's room for everybody. Their needs will differ, mine are fairly minimal.
Being retired leaves me more time to play with electronics so I added some tools over the last few years. I have enough now to do just about anything I can imagine.
For giggles, I redid the recent FFT project using my AD2: