I haven't taken any complex analysis course yet, but now I have this question that relates to it.
Let's have a look at a very simple example. Suppose $x,y$ and $z$ are the Cartesian coordinates and we have a function $z=f(x,y)=\cos(x)+\sin(y)$. However, now I change the $\mathbb{R}^2$ plane $x,y$ to complex plane and make a new function, $z=\cos(t)+i\sin(t)$.
So, can anyone tell me some famous and fundamental differences between complex plane and $\mathbb{R}^2$ by this example, like some features $\mathbb{R}^2 $ has but complex plane doesn't or the other way around. (Actually I am trying to understand why electrical engineers always want to put signal into the complex numbers rather than $\mathbb{R}^2$, if a signal is affected by 2 components)
Thanks for help me out!

The difference is that in the complex plane, you've got a multiplication $\mathbb C\times\mathbb C\to\mathbb C$ defined, which makes $\mathbb C$ into a field (which basically means that all the usual rules of arithmetics hold.)