Originally posted by: caramel
calculus maesk melly cry.![]()
Originally posted by: Deeko
Originally posted by: caramel
calculus maesk melly cry.![]()
meee too.
damn you diff. equations. And Improper Integrals. And partial fraction decomposition.
DAMN YOU NEWTON FOR COMING UP WITH THIS!!!
Originally posted by: Syringer
Where's that "Math wouldn't be hard if you weren't stupid" image?
I loooove differential equations btw. Definitley my favorite math class since probably Geometry.
Originally posted by: Syringer
So you're complaining because the course isn't challenging enough? =/
Originally posted by: caramel
reading threads about math makes mse cry!![]()
Originally posted by: HendrixFan
Be happy that you are doing those now. After Calculus, the following math courses are generally easier. You are at the peak, enjoy it while it lasts. Mind numbing probability, statistics, linear algebra, etc, etc will follow.
Originally posted by: Deeko
Originally posted by: HendrixFan
Be happy that you are doing those now. After Calculus, the following math courses are generally easier. You are at the peak, enjoy it while it lasts. Mind numbing probability, statistics, linear algebra, etc, etc will follow.
Hmm...enjoy that I'm in the harder classes....hrm....
Originally posted by: Syringer
Where's that "Math wouldn't be hard if you weren't stupid" image?
I loooove differential equations btw. Definitley my favorite math class since probably Geometry.
Originally posted by: HokieESM
Yeah, Deeko... analytical solutions to diff eqns is rather tiresome. BUT, you really have to get used to it.... because (sadly enough), pretty much everything in physics is a diff eqn. Mass-spring-damper systems, inductor-resistor-capacitor systems, quantum... all of it "fundamentally" boils down to an ODE/PDE.
rgwalt--yes, PDEs are more useful... but SO few of them actually have analytical solutions (the wave equation, Bessel's Equation, Legendre Polynomials, the heat equation), that you're basically down to using numerical techniques to find a "solution". Believe me I know.... that's what the whole concept of finite elements is based around (a numerical solution to a PDE). But, fortunately, there are some nice algorithms around that let you find solutions with more or less expediency (my 13-DOF/node, 4000 node, 10 million timestep system still takes forever, though--of course, its super-stiff, so its a real pain).
