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How many problems should I do in Spivak's Calculus?
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[QUOTE="jbunniii, post: 4628713, member: 81553"] I think it's reasonable to say that you should be able to do all of the non-starred problems before you can say that you understand the material. That doesn't mean that you need to actually DO all of them, but you should be ABLE to do so. How many you should do depends on how much time you have, of course. Maybe pick 20 or so in each chapter that look the most interesting and do those. That should give you enough of a sampling to know where your weaknesses are, and then as needed you can do extra problems (in the current or previous chapters) to improve your understanding. If you're up for a challenge, then by all means do a few of the starred exercises. Most of them are pretty cool. [/QUOTE]
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How many problems should I do in Spivak's Calculus?
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