The Calculus Lifesaver: All the Tools You Need to Excel at Calculus (Princeton Lifesaver Study Guides)

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With a week to go in Calculus II, I needed something to supplement my course's required textbook in order to be successful in the course. The textbook for the course seemed to focus too much on reinforcing concepts from previous chapters at the expense of learning new concepts. For example, when learning Sequences and Series, my course's text would put in challenging integration by parts of trig functions when demonstrating how to use the integral test for evaluating the limit. It is great to have challenging exercises to reinforce technique, but I would prefer a few more less challenging problems that demonstrate new concepts before making them more challenging. By enormous contrast, Prof. Banner's book is concise and to-the-point when explaining new concepts. When there are prerequisite skills needed, he cross-references earlier parts of his book. In his introductory material, he has a table of what sections to focus on in case you have an upcoming test (this is what saved me). After checking this book out at my university library, I went to his website and discovered several videos that summarize his book. The videos are in the same style that you might find at MIT's Open CourseWare site. The fact the Prof. Banner and Princeton University put these videos out to the world for free is the full reason I decided to purchase his book. It is least I can do to thank him for his talent and selflessness.

Author(s): Adrian Banner
Series: Princeton Lifesaver Study Guides
Edition: 1
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Year: 2007

Language: English
Pages: 753
Tags: Математика;Математический анализ;

Cover
......Page 1
Contents
......Page 8
1.1 Functions......Page 26
1.1.1 Interval notation......Page 28
1.1.2 Finding the domain......Page 29
1.1.3 Finding the range using the graph......Page 30
1.1.4 The vertical line test......Page 31
1.2 Inverse Functions......Page 32
1.2.1 The horizontal line test......Page 33
1.2.3 Restricting the domain......Page 34
1.3 Composition of Functions......Page 36
1.4 Odd and Even Functions......Page 39
1.5 Graphs of Linear Functions......Page 42
1.6 Common Functions and Graphs......Page 44
2.1 The Basics......Page 50
2.2 Extending the Domain of Trig Functions......Page 53
2.2.1 The ASTC method......Page 56
2.2.2 Trig functions outside [0; 2]......Page 58
2.3 The Graphs of Trig Functions......Page 60
2.4 Trig Identities......Page 64
3.1 Limits: The Basic Idea......Page 66
3.2 Left-Hand and Right-Hand Limits......Page 68
3.3 When the Limit Does Not Exist......Page 70
3.4 Limits at 1 and