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Hi all. What do you do when you are reading a math book and there are multiple problems you can't solve in a chapter?
For example, I am trying to learn from Apostol's book "Mathematical Analysis". In the problems at the end of the first chapter there are two that I haven't been able to figure out how to solve. It seems like the solution should be so simple but I'm just not seeing it. (There are two more I haven't attempted yet, but I think I can solve them.) Does this mean I'm not ready for the book and should get an easier one? Or is not being able to solve a couple problems in a chapter normal?
In case anyone's wondering, here's one of the problems I haven't been able to figure out:
Let w be a given complex number. If w\not=\pm 1, show that there exist two values of z=x + iy satisfying the conditions cos(z)=w and -\pi<x\leq\pi.
The identity cos(z) = cos(-z) says that if there is one such z, there have to be two... Other than that I'm at a loss.
For example, I am trying to learn from Apostol's book "Mathematical Analysis". In the problems at the end of the first chapter there are two that I haven't been able to figure out how to solve. It seems like the solution should be so simple but I'm just not seeing it. (There are two more I haven't attempted yet, but I think I can solve them.) Does this mean I'm not ready for the book and should get an easier one? Or is not being able to solve a couple problems in a chapter normal?
In case anyone's wondering, here's one of the problems I haven't been able to figure out:
Let w be a given complex number. If w\not=\pm 1, show that there exist two values of z=x + iy satisfying the conditions cos(z)=w and -\pi<x\leq\pi.
The identity cos(z) = cos(-z) says that if there is one such z, there have to be two... Other than that I'm at a loss.
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