$$R_{series}=\sum R_i$$
$$R_{parallel}=\frac{1}{\sum \frac{1}{R_i}}$$
$$X_C = \frac{1}{\omega C}$$
$$X_L = \omega L$$
$$Z_R = R$$
$$Z_C = -\frac{j}{\omega C}$$
$$Z_L = j\omega L$$
Given two resistors $R_1$ and $R_2$ with $R_2=nR_1$, the parallel combination has total resistance $\frac{nR1}{n+1}=\frac{R2}{n+1}$.
$V_*$ in Figure 1 is related to $V_A$ and $V_B$ by: $$V_* = \frac{V_A\cdot R_B + V_B\cdot R_A}{R_A+R_B}$$ Note that each input voltage is weighted by the resistor opposite $V_*$. This generalizes to $n$ voltages and $n$ resistors as: $$V_*=\left(\sum_{k=1}^n \frac{V_k}{R_k}\right) \cdot\left(\frac{1}{\sum_{k=1}^n \frac{1}{R_k}}\right),$$ that is, the short-circuit current times the total parallel resistance.
When the following conditions are met (reverse polarities for PNP):
then $I_C$ is related to $V_{BE}$ by $$I_C = I_S(T)\left(e^{V_{BE}/V_T-1}\right)$$ or equivalently $$V_{BE}=\frac{kT}{q}\ln \left(\frac{I_C}{I_S(T)}+1\right)$$ where
Then $I_B\approx\frac{I_C}{\beta}$, though it is still heavily dependent on $V_{BE}$. In the active region, $I_C >> I_S$, so the $-1$ term can be neglected.