Originally posted by: LordMaul
Thank God I'm done with Calculus. That hell should never be inflicted upon anyone. 😛
Originally posted by: TecHNooB
Originally posted by: LordMaul
Thank God I'm done with Calculus. That hell should never be inflicted upon anyone. 😛
How hard is multivariable calc compared to calc 1-3?
The amusing bit - there isn't a single electrical engineer in the class. The professor talks about how useful it is, particularly in electrical engineering, and there you go, not a single one in the class, at least not that section. There are plenty of other engineering students though.Originally posted by: BrownTown
umm well usually multivariable calc IS calc 3. Personally I found multivariable calc to be much easier since you aren't really learning anything new, you just do the same thing several times. Laplace transform is differential equations though, not mutivariable.
EDIT: and yes it kicks all kinds of a$$, I love it. It turns electrical engineering problems that would be complex differential equations into easy algebra.
That, combined with someone saying the Laplace Transform "kicks all kinds of a$$" - yeah, welcome to our version of "normal."😀Originally posted by: DaShen
I love the uber-geekiness in ATOT. It makes me feel normal.
Originally posted by: LordMaul
Thank God I'm done with Calculus. That hell should never be inflicted upon anyone. 😛
I guess that'd be an important thing to note - yes, we get equation tables. The professors here thus far seem more interested in us devoting time to understanding the concepts. Mindless memorization can wait, and would likely come naturally with repeated exposure to the material.Originally posted by: ProviaFan
Laplace transforms are great, at least when the professor gives you an equation table for the exam so you don't have to memorize them. 😉