Learning Calculus
I hope this doesn''t qualify as a homework question, but I was wondering if there were any good websites for learning calulus. I searched google and yahoo with ''calculus'' and ''calculus tutorial'', but all I got was those lame ''put in a function and watch the derivative come out'' sites. Does anyone know of any good online calculus tutorials/references?
No, HTML is not an OO language.
Perhaps Mathworld:
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/
MathWorld itself is not for beginners, but it may give you better search terms that will lead you to better sites. Also, most bookstores have a math section. You might want to browse those books and see what looks good.
A book may be expensive, but most of the tutorials I've seen are meant to accompany some class - they usually aren't very useful on their own.
[edited by - CrazedGenius on April 30, 2002 12:09:27 AM]
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/
MathWorld itself is not for beginners, but it may give you better search terms that will lead you to better sites. Also, most bookstores have a math section. You might want to browse those books and see what looks good.
A book may be expensive, but most of the tutorials I've seen are meant to accompany some class - they usually aren't very useful on their own.
[edited by - CrazedGenius on April 30, 2002 12:09:27 AM]
You could check out your local library.
In terms of how much you have to learn... once you learn how to derive and integrate, plus the FTC, 90% of the rest is extensions on those. It''s actually pretty neat what you can do with Calculus. You''ll wonder why it wasn''t taught as part of an advanced Alegra II class
In terms of how much you have to learn... once you learn how to derive and integrate, plus the FTC, 90% of the rest is extensions on those. It''s actually pretty neat what you can do with Calculus. You''ll wonder why it wasn''t taught as part of an advanced Alegra II class
http://www.sosmath.com/
It may not be the best for tutorials, but it is a good reference. I use it all the time when I forget things I shouldn''t have.
It may not be the best for tutorials, but it is a good reference. I use it all the time when I forget things I shouldn''t have.
If I were you I''d pick up a good book. I must admit, I''ve only learned the calculus I know from school ( upto a pretty high level ), so I haven''t searched for it on the net.
Death of one is a tragedy, death of a million is just a statistic.
Death of one is a tragedy, death of a million is just a statistic.
I''d say learning calculus directly from a book would be VERY difficult. Of course, maybe I just haven''t seen the right book. Surely there must be a teacher at your school who you could set up some private tutor time with?
Calculus Made Easy by Martin Gardner is a great book. It teaches the basics of both integral and differential calculus. I REALLY suck at math and even I got the hang of it after reading over it only a couple times*. I know that what I learned wasn''t all that difficult, but it was big step for me because it got me over my fear that calculus is harder than it is. Sorry, starting to ramble, go get that book, it''s really good.
-AJ
*I didn''t read it cover to cover, I only read the first few chapters excluding the introductory chapters.
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-AJ
*I didn''t read it cover to cover, I only read the first few chapters excluding the introductory chapters.
C:\DOS
C:\DOS\RUN
RUN\DOS\RUN
-Comic Book Store Guy''s t-shirt that I saw on the Simpsons, although it didn''t actually come from the Simpsons.
http://vdsoft.netfirms.com/home.html
quote:Original post by Anonymous Poster
I''d say learning calculus directly from a book would be VERY difficult. Of course, maybe I just haven''t seen the right book. Surely there must be a teacher at your school who you could set up some private tutor time with?
actually, i learned the whole calculus stuff (except fourier transformations and stuff like that) from a simple book in 2 weeks (and since then i''m getting more and more into the whole, but the basic understanding of everything that book gave me in 2 weeks) while my friends in school (i left school..) learned the same now in 1 year and don''t understand it that well as i did after those two weeks..
depends all on the medium that teaches the stuff.. my book was good.. the math-teacher... well... you get the idea
"take a look around" - limp bizkit
www.google.com
You really are best off buying a book, but assuming you have more time than money start here. Follow the link for "Math Resources by Subject". Here is a link to a site that gives links to mathematics departments at many differant major schools and a brief description of what you can expect to find there. This site doesn''t teach calculus, but it has a large number of exercises. That last one might be the best place to start. You might well be able to teach yourself calculus between it and MathWorld. When you run into a problem you can''t answer look up the topic in MathWorld.
I''ll let this thread stay open. The question was reasonable. You weren''t looking for the answer to a problem, which is really where I draw the line. Its perfectly fine to ask for links to good learning resources here, .
Graham Rhodes
Senior Scientist
Applied Research Associates, Inc.
Graham Rhodes
Senior Scientist
Applied Research Associates, Inc.
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