The big thing to remember is, you can't convert directly between Volts and Amps like you can with Farenheight and Celcius, they measure two different things. Think of it as water running through a garden hose:
Voltage (E) = How high the water pressure is (Loose analogy)
Amps (I) = How much water is flowing
Ohms (R) = How much crud is in the hose restricting water flow, or a crimp in the hose.
The REAL definition of a Volt is the amount of "pressure" it takes to push one Amp of current through one Ohm of resistance. Obviously in electronics you can acheive situations that couldn't happen (1 drop of water at 2,000 PSI) with a standard garden hose, but it gets the point across.
As stated multiple times in the thread, you can use Ohm's Law (I = V/R) to find amps if you have the voltage and resistance values.