Other Complex analysis or calculus?

Neutrin0
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Im currently reading mathematics for physicists by Philippe Dennery and André Krzywicki, and I’m understanding most concepts however I think it would be better for me to get a book on complex analysis or calculus to better understand it so I’m not left looking at an equation for an hour trying to figure out what it means. So here comes the split, do I get a complex analysis book? Or a calculus book? I might be able to Borrow a calculus textbook from my math teacher study that for a bit and then move onto the next book, which would be the complex analysis. And I’m pretty sure the book mathematics for physicists has some linear algebra to so I might get a linear algebra book to. But I’d rather get an answer from experts then assume something.
 
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CAlculus is typically learned before complex...

So calculus.
 
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If you haven't mastered differential, integral and multivariate calculus at the freshman level, then that should be your focus. If you have, then the typical freshman textbooks in calculus won't help you much. Maybe a more advanced text in real analysis, differential equations or a similar subject would help you understand the physics. Regardless, if your background in calculus and real analysis is not sufficient, complex analysis will seem impossibly difficult.
 
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chth said:
If you haven't mastered differential, integral and multivariate calculus at the freshman level, then that should be your focus. If you have, then the typical freshman textbooks in calculus won't help you much. Maybe a more advanced text in real analysis, differential equations or a similar subject would help you understand the physics. Regardless, if your background in calculus and real analysis is not sufficient, complex analysis will seem impossibly difficult.
Thank you for the advice, I did take a look at my schools calc book and if I’m not mistaken it did have some of the subjects you mentioned. And if it doesn’t there are online sources that I can use in case, regardless I’ll make sure to focus on what you said first and then move onto complex analysis.
 
A lot of complex analysis books are super rigorous and meant for mathematicians rather than physics students. A good applied text is the one by Zill - the first chapter starts with complex numbers so you can do it before calculus, but it will eventually start using calculus and assume you already learned it.
 
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Muu9 said:
A lot of complex analysis books are super rigorous and meant for mathematicians rather than physics students. A good applied text is the one by Zill - the first chapter starts with complex numbers so you can do it before calculus, but it will eventually start using calculus and assume you already learned it.
Schaum's Calculus too, is a good applied text. An underrated collection, imo.
 
WWGD said:
Schaum's Calculus too, is a good applied text. An underrated collection, imo.
You mean this one?
 
Muu9 said:
You mean this one?
Yes, that one. Could complement other textbooks, and there are cheap used copies of it.
 

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