Added: 3 years ago
From: msumurph
Views: 7,969
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  • very helpful, thanks!

  • What song is this plz?

  • @PSPJOHNPSP Made that video quite a while ago. I think the song was a free sample one that came with a Windows Media Player at that time. I'll have to go look for it on my old computer.

  • "wuayyyyyyyyyyyyy........" lol i like how u pronounce "y"

  • @PSPJOHNPSP That's how we talk up here in Michigan :)

  • thank you

  • @I3azookaJOE No problem. Hope it helped!

  • My teacher had to take an emergency trip and I was left to figure this type of problem out solo, before the test.Thank you so much-- I'm 100% ready now.

  • @hussman03 Glad it helped!

  • Comment removed

  • this is awesome. thank you.

  • "At this point, these pretzels are making me thirsty" hahaha :) Thanks for the video...it helped a lot :)

  • wow, are you people seriously criticizing this guy for his video? the reason you're watching it is cause you were too stupid to figure this shit out on your own...like me. thanks for the vid msumurph, it helped a lot.

  • thanks..from the Philippines

  • this helped me a lot.i still dont understand the whole concept but this video helped me a lot.thank you

  • @chrisisvenom1 Glad to know it helped some. Hang in there. It takes time and experience to master some of these concepts.

  • @kasdad321 That's a little harsh.

  • @msumurph haha dude sorry i was just upset because i wasnt getting the concept...after asking my teacher for help i get it now :)

  • good job and all... but you talk a little slow and it can get dull fast.

  • well, i began seeing videos on derivatives and one video took me to another and i ended up seeing this vid.. sorry if i wanted to go a little ahead on my course.

  • Each "slice" of water has to travel a certain distance to reach the the line 4 feet above the tank. That distance is the total height of 14 minus the height of the slice itself. So that is 14 - y. That distance changes as the tank loses water. The top slice only has to go 4 feet. The bottom slice has to go 14 feet.

  • i'm taking calculus in high school right now and i just begun seeing derivatives, i reasoned that the integral is the "anti-derivative". one question though, where did you get the "14-y" distance to move the water?

  • @werlkaw why are you watching this video then? This is BC Calc. And no, the integral is not the anti-derivative, you use anti derivatives to get integral.

  • @armoman92 actually you are wrong. An anti-derivative is an integral, but without boundaries. So essentially its called an indefinite integral or antiderivative. When you add boundaries its called a definite integral. 

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