I was reading a book on coding theory, there was a definition fot the Hamming's Distance and also one example. Understanding purely from the definition was hard but the example helped to give meaning to the definition. I felt the same when reading some other books so as I'm still self-learning mathematics, I just got this curiosity:
Is it a problem to understand mathematical definitions only with examples? Should I aim at a level of understanding with definitions only? Will this level eventually come?
It may be a naive question, but I feel insecure of bulding wrong study practice. I'm a also a piano student, when reading about piano study I've discovered that it's study isn't really intuitive then I've expanded and started to get worried also with studying habits for other things I study.
There are at least two sides of mathematics, on one you have an intricate structure whose tricks and aphorisms yield obviously true conclusions, and on the other there are computations and contests to find counterexamples to the conventional wisdom. The beauty is always somewhere in between.