#16 in Calculus books
Use arrows to jump to the previous/next product

Reddit mentions of Infinitesimal Calculus (Dover Books on Mathematics)

Sentiment score: 3
Reddit mentions: 3

We found 3 Reddit mentions of Infinitesimal Calculus (Dover Books on Mathematics). Here are the top ones.

Infinitesimal Calculus (Dover Books on Mathematics)
Buying options
View on Amazon.com
or
    Features:
  • Quick to heat frying pan: frying pan offers fast, even heat distribution; engineered and independently tested and certified to deliver and hold to highest performance standards
  • Durable, premium nonstick fry pan: durable, top-quality nonstick interior provides added scratch resistance, quick food release and easy cleanup; comfortable rubberized handle
  • Oven safe frying pan: nonstick frying pan is oven safe to 350 F
  • Nonstick frying pan pairs well with other Farberware items: This 8-inch nonstick skillet complements the cookware sets, stockpots and other items throughout the Farberware collection
  • Quality : quality Assurance and NSF certified
Specs:
Height9.26 Inches
Length5.98 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateJuly 2003
Weight0.48 Pounds
Width0.32 Inches

idea-bulb Interested in what Redditors like? Check out our Shuffle feature

Shuffle: random products popular on Reddit

Found 3 comments on Infinitesimal Calculus (Dover Books on Mathematics):

u/JoinXorDie · 3 pointsr/math

I'd say check with your professor first if it's for a class. You never know if you'll be missing a section. It helps to read what has changed in the newest edition. If it's minor cleanup or the addition of a single chapter you may be able to pass with the older version. However sometimes they change exercises and you'd be missing them for homework. Talk to the professor.

You can, however, check for Indian versions of books on Ebay or other places. These are usually paperbacks and are often in English, but they come at significantly reduced cost.

Otherwise, if this is for self-learning, I'd highly suggest looking at some Dover books. They pick up older classics or popular titles, often edit/update them a little, then publish in a cheap but nice looking and portable paperback.

E.g. Dover book on Infinitesimal Calculus for 4 bucks

There are hundreds of others. Many with good reviews, 4-5 star on Amazon. The presentation can be old-timey in some cases but the math is still relevant. I'm reading a book from the 1960's on "Information Theory" from Dover where you can see how this math motivated things like the internet and cell phones. It's based on Shannon's groundbreaking work in the 40s--much of it is still used to this day. They had the author (not Shannon) update it a bit for this new publication.

u/autoditactics · 2 pointsr/learnmath

Take a look at nonstandard analysis. I believe some studies in the 90s showed that students better understood these methods.

As for books, I can recommend Henle or the free book by Keisler at the high school level.

u/tavernkeeper · 1 pointr/UniversityofReddit

Perhaps non-standard calculus/analysis. There are some free texts here otherwise this one has good reviews.