MarcAlexander said:
NOTE: To put it politely: I have no idea what all that meant. I understand the 'lim a->b' sort of thing, but not the rest of it.
Do you understand it formally? i.e. from a δ and ε point of view? Also do you understand differentiation from the point of view of limits and difference quotients? Before you move on to integrals I suggest you can do all of the following fluidly (and this is the typical order to learn them in also):
1. Formally define a limit, and be able to prove a function has a limit at a given point.
2. Understand and use: continuity, the mean value theorem, intermediate value theorem.
3. Formally define a derivative. Take a derivative by definition. Know the criteria for differentiability and be able to apply it.
4. Have an understanding of what a derivative is, and how it relates to change. Especially related to position, velocity, and acceleration.
5. Be able to use, know, and derive: the sum/difference rule, the product rule, the quotient rule, the power rule, and the chain rule
6. Know the derivative of six basic trig functions
7. Be able to take the nth derivative of any given algebraic or trig function.
8. Use derivatives to curve sketch, find max/mins, related rates, or optimize.
9. Understand and be able to compute Riemann Sums
You also should do many practice problems relating to each of these steps before moving on to the next.