No. They say different things.
Ohm's Law says that voltage is resistance times current.
Kirchoff's Voltage Law says that the signed sum of the voltage drops going around a series circuit is zero. A consequence of this is that two elements in parallel with each other have the same voltage across them.
Kirchoff's Current Law says that the signed sum of the currents entering a node is zero. A consequence of this is that the current at every point in a series circuit is the same.
ohms law.
Total current entering a node is always zero.
To find the conductance using ohms law,you take the inverse of the resistance(/R)
Current
No.
no
ohms=amps/volts Amps= volts/ohms Volts = Amps*Ohms
Ohms law does not consider inductance
Ohms law.
in transformer
no
The mathematical form of Ohms law is I=V divided by R. I is current, V is voltage while R is the resistance.