Jurrasic
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Just wondering what you find harder? Trig or Calculus?
jtbell said:Define "harder."
mathwonk said:calculus involves the concepts of derivatives and integrals of functions. trig functions are one class of functions. so trig is more the study of one class of examples and calculus is an idea.
in practice one applies the idea behind calculus to examples like those found in trig.
thus if you study calculus purely abstractly, it might seem easier than trig, but if you study the examples of calculus, then trig will be a necessary prerequisite to doing calculus in many cases of practical interest.
I myself learned advanced calculus of banach spaces a la loomis and sternberg before learning trig. a kind of goofy progression. i could prove the graph of a function of bounded variation had measure zero before i learned to integrate tan(x).
i do not recommend this order of topics. in general, walk first, then run.
but one could learn first the calculus of polynomial functions, before knowing trig.
The question is due to - for some people trig seems to be much harder than calculus? How daunting. Since most, if not all schools teach trig before calculus?PCSL said:And also why don't you tell us why you have this question? It would help to have some context.
edit: I totally agree with what Angry Citizen said.
BloodyFrozen said:Very nice:)
Anyways I don't like Trig because many teachers require memorization (atleast at my high schools and no proofs, not that it's terribly hard to prove though).
Jurrasic said:Just wondering what you find harder? Trig or Calculus?
chiro said:The rigorous study of calculus can get pretty tough. If you are talking about the "computational" calculus then that is a lot easier though.