Two basic passive components of electric circuits: a resistor opposes the flow of current, while a capacitor stores electrical charge and energy.
Resistance in ohms and Ohm's law, the resistor as a heat producer, and the capacitor as a charge store are standard physics facts, and the series-parallel behaviour is a frequent conceptual question.
A resistor opposes current and dissipates energy as heat, while a capacitor stores energy and does not dissipate it; do not treat them as similar. Resistances add in series, but capacitances add in parallel, which reverses the usual intuition.
A resistor opposes current (ohms, Ohm's law, makes heat); a capacitor stores charge (farads); resistances add in series, capacitances add in parallel.
concept electromagnetic induction, concept semiconductor devices, concept superconductors