Calculus Online Textbook
Found 7 free book(s)Calculus Online Textbook Chapter 1 - MIT OpenCourseWare
ocw.mit.edu1 Introductionto Calculus 1 u(r) = slope of f(t) Fig. 1.4 Velocities + V and -V give motion forward and back, ending at f(6)=0. The v-graph shows velocities + V and -V.The distance starts up with slope + V and reaches f = 3V. Then the car starts backward. The distance goes down with slope
Mathematical Reasoning - University of South Carolina
people.math.sc.edutextbook from the previous versions is the addition of more exercises with answers or hints in theappendix. Although not part of the textbook, there are now 107 online videos with about 14 hours of content that span the first seven chapters of this book. These videos are freely availableonlineat Grand Valley’s Department of Mathematics YouTube
Math 13 — An Introduction to Abstract Mathematics
www.math.uci.eduAvailable free online! Very good on the basics: if you’re having trouble with reading set notation or how to construct a proof, this book’s for you! These notes are deliberately pitched at a high level relative to this textbook to provide contrast. • Mathematical Reasoning, Ted Sundstrom, 2nd ed 2014. Available free online! Excellent ...
Basic Analysis I - jirka.org
www.jirka.orgstudents’ questions. To this day I remember several nonsensical statements I heard from my calculus teacher in high school, who simply did not understand the concept of the limit, though he could “do” the problems in the textbook. We start with a discussion of the real number system, most importantly its completeness property,
ELEMENTARY DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS - Trinity University
ramanujan.math.trinity.eduMuch of calculus is devoted to learning mathematical techniques that are applied in later courses in mathematics and the sciences; you wouldn’t have time to learn much calculus if you insisted on seeing a specific application of every topic covered …
Grinstead and Snell’s Introduction to Probability
math.dartmouth.educalculus, including an introduction to multiple integrals. In order to cover Chap-ter 11, which contains material on Markovchains, some knowledge of matrix theory is necessary. The text can alsobe used in a discreteprobabilitycourse. The materialhas been organized in such a way that the discrete and continuous probability discussions are
Computer Networking: A Top-Down Approach, 7th Edition
people.cs.clemson.eduadvanced calculus, probability, or stochastic process concepts (although we’ve included some homework problems for students with this advanced background). The book is therefore appropriate for undergraduate courses and for first-year graduate courses. It should also be useful to practitioners in the telecommunications industry.