malikasal - Its been a few years, but I have taught a review course for the PE Civil: Structural exam and performed behind-the-scenes technical review / editing for PPI's structural exam preparation book series. The single, most important check an Engineer should make when selecting a study reference is easy to do, but usually overlooked. See if the code editions used on the exam match the code editions covered in the study reference.
Here are the codes used for the October 2015 NCEES PE Civil: Structural exam:
NCEES
Here are the codes used in your first link, the PPI "Practice Problems for the Civil Engineering PE Exam: A Companion to the Civil Engineering Reference Manual (CEPP14), 14th Edition":
PPI
There are significant discrepancies. Here are some examples (NCEES vs. PPI)
ACI 318: 2011 vs. 2008
ACI 530: 2011 vs. 2008
AISC: 14th Edition vs. 13th Edition
NDS: 2012 vs. 2005
PCI: 7th Edition vs. 6th Edition
Looks like this book is outdated.
Your second selection is a better fit, PPI "Structural Depth Reference Manual for the Civil PE Exam (CEST4), 4th Edition". Check it for yourself, the links to the codes used are on the PPI web page you have listed.
I assume you immediate goal is to pass the PE Civil: Structural exam. If so, I do not recommend using the PPI Structural Engineering Reference Manual. The codes are a good fit for your exam, but there are several addition codes covered that you will not need. Also, the problems covered by the SE manual will probably more complex than you will encounter on your exam.
If your longer term goal is to obtain an SE license, then the Structural Book is a great reference... but, in your case, delay studying it until after you have obtained the PE license.
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