Added: 3 years ago
From: khanacademy
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  • this is the easy part...finding the limits is the issue

  • He sounds like rainman... I'm definitely gonna run out of space..definetly!

  • Thanks a lot

  • i am taking college algebra and trig. In the fall i take first semester of calc. omg!!This looks impossibly hard. What semester of calc is it.

  • You think this is hard? Its mad easy. Dont worry about it though. You will understand it. Seach for Calculus under 20 minutes here and LISTEN to what the guy says. Stop at the points where he goes too fast and think for as long as you need to, so you can understand. The video might be 20 minutes, but it takes an hour of thinking or even more to understand it all. This is just a simple expansion. Calculus is mad easy. People make too much of it.

  • Calculus is just mechanical for the most part, Understanding why calculus works is another store though.

  • @skievat: I find it rather intuitive to learn these concepts by first, listening to these videos; second, copying all the mathematics written by Sal on the particular lesson you are studying, onto some kind of paper or tablet, and then analyzing the mathematics; and third and lastly, writing all of it in English – just, essentially, writing everything you just learned in English.

  • Comment removed

  • I think it is two. It's not hard, just start at derivatives and work your way up.

  • its the third semester i think

  • Try to follow asian culture. Then it might become easier.

  • marzil

    Don't worry, first, u take all the basic rules of Integrals in Calc 1 and 2 and then you will learn these things in Calc 3.

  • This is farrr into calculus. This can be the 3rd semester sometimes. The first is usually just basic limits, differentiation and integrals. In that class you will then learn application. The 2nd course is more advanced applications with series, vectors, and polar graphs. Then you get to the third which is multivariable calculus which is what this is. Look in your course catalog and find multivariable calc, this is where you would find this. And if you have learned the prereqs, this is simple.

  • In my college, this is calc III and calc IV. You would most likely do double integrals in Calc II and basic integrals in calc I

  • yeah for me calc 3 was multi-variable vector calculus. The last chapter covered surface integrals of vector fields, curl, divergence, Green's theorem, Stoke's theorem, Line integrals, etc

    What exactly would calculus 4 cover?

  • My calculus IV would cover basically all of your calc 3 but in my school, calc 3 is essentially differential equations with all their attributes nd my prof would introduce topics of calc IV at the end of the semester to get us acquainted wit the material..

  • At my school we are moving onto Boundary Value Problems, Heat Equations, and other PDEs, although it's not really calculus, I think that is what is typically covered next.

  • @technocarmike Yeah pretty much just move onto more applied mathematical analysis. Usually you will continue to learn more about ODE's like laplace transforms and the PDE stuff like heat eqn's and fourier series.

  • @liquidstl It will cover a fun little topic called differential equations..... These little equations that are completely non-intuitive that people have spent lifetimes trying to solve..... But you'll cover the easy ones :D

  • @gvsfgdf yeah I took DiffEQ last spring, and more topics from Diffeq came up in my engineering math class

  • @liquidstl Are you on semester or quarter system? They might be the same thing but for a different class time-

    frame.

  • @Japanime92  Yeah Im on semesters

  • 3rd

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