Not easily. You need to learn numerical analysis, because you have to solve it numerically.
Again, refer back to Gauss's law. Did you ever solve for the E-field of a finite line charge using Gauss's law?
The reason why Gauss's law and Ampere's law are used in highly-symmetric situations is because you have to do very minimal calculus due to the geometry of the field. Otherwise, you do not have an analytical solution and you will have to solve it numerically.
If you continue in physics and end up doing advanced E&M using something like the Jackson's text, you WILL solve not only non-symmetric sources, but also solving for "off-axis" locations. Try solving the field for a circular loop of current, but NOT just along the axis of the loop. It is not easy, and you'll end up with an infinite series.
So my advice at the moment is, enjoy and appreciate these simpler situations while you can. It gets real ugly real soon enough.
Zz.