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         Calculus:     more books (100)
  1. The Calculus Diaries: How Math Can Help You Lose Weight, Win in Vegas, and Survive a Zombie Apocalypse by Jennifer Ouellette, 2010-08-31
  2. Calculus for Dummies by Mark Ryan, 2003-05-01
  3. Barron's AP Calculus by Shirley O. Hockett, David Bock, 2010-02-01
  4. Calculus Made Easy by Silvanus P. Thompson, 2008-05-18
  5. The Humongous Book of Calculus Problems: For People Who Don't Speak Math by W. Michael Kelley, 2007-01-02
  6. How to Ace Calculus: The Streetwise Guide by Colin Adams, Abigail Thompson, et all 1998-07-15
  7. The Calculus Direct: An intuitively Obvious Approach to a Basic Understanding of the Calculus for the Casual Observer (Volume 1) by John Weiss, 2010-05-14
  8. The Calculus Lifesaver: All the Tools You Need to Excel at Calculus (Princeton Lifesaver Study Guide) by Adrian Banner, 2007-03-05
  9. Schaum's Outline of Calculus, 5th ed. (Schaum's Outline Series) by Frank Ayres, Elliott Mendelson, 2008-08-25
  10. Calculus Workbook For Dummies by Mark Ryan, 2005-09-02
  11. Calculus: Early Transcendentals (Stewart's Calculus Series) by James Stewart, 2007-06-07
  12. Student Solutions Manual for Single Variable Calculus: Early Transcendentals and Calculus: Early Transcendental by James Stewart, 2007-07-04
  13. Calculus (College Review Series) by Elliot Gootman Ph.D., 1997-09-01
  14. Forgotten Calculus by Barbara Lee BleauPh.D., 2002-08-12

1. Calculus.org - THE CALCULUS PAGE .
Directory of calculus links for tutorials, homework help, history sample tests, and tips on exam preparation.
http://www.calculus.org/
calculus.org: THE CALCULUS PAGE
Editorial Board
Sponsors
Calculus.org Resources For The Calculus Student:

2. Calculus - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
calculus (Latin, calculus, a small stone used for counting) is a branch of mathematics that includes the study of limits, derivatives, integrals,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calculus
Calculus
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation search For other uses, see Calculus (disambiguation) Topics in calculus Fundamental theorem
Limits of functions

Continuity

Vector calculus
...
Improper integrals

Integration by
parts
disks cylindrical
shells
...
partial fractions
Calculus Latin calculus , a small stone used for counting) is a branch of mathematics that includes the study of limits derivatives integrals , and infinite series , and constitutes a major part of modern university education. Historically, it was sometimes referred to as "the calculus", but that usage is seldom seen today. Calculus has widespread applications in science and engineering and is used to solve complicated problems for which algebra alone is insufficient. Calculus builds on algebra trigonometry , and analytic geometry and includes two major branches, differential calculus and integral calculus , that are related by the fundamental theorem of calculus . In more advanced mathematics, calculus is usually called analysis and is defined as the study of functions More generally

3. S.O.S. Math - Calculus
Explains concepts in detail of limits, convergence of series, finding the derivative from the definition and continuity. Some basic formula conversions are
http://www.sosmath.com/calculus/calculus.html

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4. Calculus-Help.com Will Help You Survive Calculus!
calculusHelp.com offers calculus help to students of all ages, including free multimedia tutorials and detailed calculus examples with complete solutions.
http://www.calculus-help.com/
Calculus-Help.com is, and always will be, a free resource. If you'd like to make a (non tax-deductible) donation to help this web site continue using its super powers for good, please click here . (If you have Windows XP SP2, your browser may block the page and ask you to allow ActiveX controls; it's perfectly safe to do so.)

5. Visual Calculus
Short descriptions and examples for limits, derivatives, and integrals. Various plugins are needed to view some of the pages.
http://archives.math.utk.edu/visual.calculus/
Tutorials Pre-Calculus Limits and Continuity Derivatives Applications of Differentiation ... Sequences and Series Information What? Who? How? Awards ... Help Page

6. MIT | Textbook Publications | Calculus By Gilbert Strang
Textbook by Gilbert Strang in pdf. Covers derivatives, the power rule, integrals,
http://ocw.mit.edu/ans7870/resources/Strang/strangtext.htm
var wtl_loc = document.URL.indexOf('https:')==0?'https://a248.e.akamai.net/v/248/2120/1d/download.akamai.com/crs/lgsitewise.js':'http://crs.akamai.com/crs/lgsitewise.js'; document.write(""); MIT OpenCourseWare MIT OCW Supplementary Resources
Calculus by Gilbert Strang
OCW is pleased to make this textbook available online. Published in 1991 and still in print from Wellesley-Cambridge Press , the book is a useful resource for educators and self-learners alike. It is well organized, covers single variable and multivariable calculus in depth, and is rich with applications. There is also an online Instructor's Manual and a student Study Guide
Cover of Calculus , by Professor Gilbert Strang. (Image courtesy of Gilbert Strang.) Calculus Textbook Components Table of Contents ( PDF Index ( PDF Answers to Odd-Numbered Problems ( PDF Supplementary Tables and Equations ( PDF
ChapterS FILES 1: Introduction to Calculus, pp. 1-43
1.1 Velocity and Distance, pp. 1-7
1.2 Calculus Without Limits, pp. 8-15
1.3 The Velocity at an Instant, pp. 16-21

7. Distance Calculus At Suffolk University
Distance calculus at Suffolk University is a universitylevel calculus course program taught entirely via the internet.
http://www.calculus.net/ci2/?tag=

8. Calculus Graphics -- Douglas N. Arnold
Graphical demonstrations developed by Douglas N. Arnold for the first year calculus student.
http://www.ima.umn.edu/~arnold/graphics.html
(animated GIF version)
GRAPHICS FOR THE CALCULUS CLASSROOM
Douglas N. Arnold These are excerpts from a collection of graphical demonstrations I developed for first year calculus. Those interested in higher math may also want to visit my page of graphics for complex analysis . This page is on the list of the most frequently linked math pages according to MathSearch. Viewing instructions. The animations on this page use the animated GIF format. There is also a Java version of this page . The Java animator allows you to start and stop the animation, advance through the frames manually, and control the speed. Also the animation is a bit smoother, and the frames shuttle (first to last and then backward to first, etc.), which is a bit nicer. Unfortunately, the Java versions of the animation usually take much more time to load, and the Java animator has been know to crash browsers, especially on machines without much memory. An older version of this page using the MPEG animation format is available, but no longer actively maintained, and so not recommended.
Differentials and differences
This animation expands upon the classic calculus diagram above. The diagram illustrates the local accuracy of the tangent line approximation to a smooth curve, orotherwise statedthe closeness of the differential of a function to the difference of function values due to a small increment of the independent variable. (In the diagram the increment of the independent variable is shown in green, the differentiali.e., the product of the derivative and the incrementin red, and the difference of function values as the red segment plus the yellow segment. The point is that if the green segment is small, the yellow segment is

9. Limits
The Rectangle Approximation Method The Fundamental Theorem of calculus Problem of Area Minimum value of the integral of a function
http://www.ies.co.jp/math/products/calc/menu.html
Limits
Derivatives
Integrals

10. Calculus On The Web
An internet tutoring utility for learning and practicing calculus. COW gives the student or interested user the opportunity to learn and practice problems.
http://cow.math.temple.edu/
Welcome to
Calculus on the Web
The COW Library Click on a button below to open a book
General information desk. Contents of the COW library If you wish to log in for a recorded session, click on the Login button. Login help. Calculus on the Web is
partially supported by the
National Science Foundation COW is a project of
Gerardo Mendoza and Dan Reich
Temple University

11. Math Forum: Calculus
The best Internet resources for calculus classroom materials, software, Internet projects, and public forums for discussion.
http://mathforum.org/calculus/calculus.html
Calculus
Back to Math by Subject
Math by Subject

K12 Topics
algebra
arithmetic
calculus
discrete math
geometry
pre-calculus
prob/stat
Advanced Topics analysis calculus diff. equations game theory discrete math geometry (coll.) geometry (adv.) linear algebra modern algebra num. analysis
Internet Calculus Resources
See also Single-variable Calculus and Multi-variable Calculus in the Math Forum's Internet Mathematics Library.
Home The Math Library Quick Reference Search ... Help http://mathforum.org/ The Math Forum is a research and educational enterprise of the Drexel School of Education

12. Calculus History
The main ideas which underpin the calculus developed over a very long period of time indeed. The first steps were taken by Greek mathematicians.
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/HistTopics/The_rise_of_calculus.html
A history of the calculus
Analysis index History Topics Index
Version for printing
The main ideas which underpin the calculus developed over a very long period of time indeed. The first steps were taken by Greek mathematicians. To the Greeks numbers were ratios of integers so the number line had "holes" in it. They got round this difficulty by using lengths, areas and volumes in addition to numbers for, to the Greeks, not all lengths were numbers. Zeno of Elea , about 450 BC, gave a number of problems which were based on the infinite. For example he argued that motion is impossible:- If a body moves from A to B then before it reaches B it passes through the mid-point, say B of AB. Now to move to B it must first reach the mid-point B of AB . Continue this argument to see that A must move through an infinite number of distances and so cannot move. Leucippus Democritus and Antiphon all made contributions to the Greek method of exhaustion which was put on a scientific basis by Eudoxus about 370 BC. The method of exhaustion is so called because one thinks of the areas measured expanding so that they account for more and more of the required area. However Archimedes , around 225 BC, made one of the most significant of the Greek contributions. His first important advance was to show that the area of a segment of a parabola is

13. Tutorials - HMC Calculus Tutorial
Topics include precalculus, calculus, multivariable calculus, linear algebra and differential equations.
http://www.math.hmc.edu/calculus/tutorials/

first time visitors
notes about fonts taking the quizzes math 11 and 12 ...
Click here to get these tutorials in PDF format.
For more fun, check out Math Fun Facts
...or visit the HMC Math Department

14. Calc101.com Automatic Calculus, Linear Algebra, And Polynomials
Check your calculus homework! Enter your function to get your calculus derivative or integral with each step explained, automatically and fast.
http://calc101.com/
Calc101.com Automatic Calculus and Algebra Help
derivatives, integrals, graphs, linear equations, matrix algebra
automatic calculus help on the web NOW...
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  • first and second derivatives, partial fractions
  • systems of linear equations and over 80 matrix algebra operations
free answers... buy a password to get all the steps
  • 99.9% of freshman indefinite integrals (antiderivatives)
  • determinants and matrix inverses (using row reduction)
FAQs legal email us français ... Deutsch
easy-to-use, live, TRY IT:
stored derivatives and integrals geometry animations

15. Math.com Homework Help Calculus
Select Subject, Basic Math, Everyday Math, Pre-Algebra, Algebra, Geometry, Trigonometry, Statistics, calculus, Advanced Topics, Others. Resources
http://www.math.com/homeworkhelp/Calculus.html
Home Teacher Parents Glossary ... Email this page to a friend Select Subject -Select Subject Basic Math Everyday Math Pre-Algebra Algebra Geometry Trigonometry Statistics Calculus Advanced Topics Others Resources Cool Tools
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16. Calculus Bible
The calculus Bible
http://www.math.byu.edu/Math/CalculusBible/
This document was designed for a frames-capable browser. You can still read the text here

17. Calculus -- From Wolfram MathWorld
The calculus, more properly called analysis (or real analysis or, in older literature, infinitesimal analysis) is the branch of mathematics studying the
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Calculus.html
Algebra
Applied Mathematics

Calculus and Analysis

Discrete Mathematics
... Interactive Demonstrations
Calculus In general, "a" calculus is an abstract theory developed in a purely formal way. "The" calculus, more properly called analysis (or real analysis or, in older literature, infinitesimal analysis ) is the branch of mathematics studying the rate of change of quantities (which can be interpreted as slopes of curves) and the length, area , and volume of objects. The calculus is sometimes divided into differential and integral calculus , concerned with derivatives and integrals respectively. While ideas related to calculus had been known for some time (Archimedes' method of exhaustion was a form of calculus), it was not until the independent work of Newton and Leibniz that the modern elegant tools and ideas of calculus were developed. Even so, many years elapsed until the subject was put on a mathematically rigorous footing by mathematicians such as Weierstrass. SEE ALSO: Arc Length Area Calculus of Variations Change of Variables Theorem ... Volume REFERENCES: Anton, H.

18. Karl's Calculus Tutor: Table Of Contents
Table of Contents for Karl s calculus Tutor. Select from topics Limits, Continuity, Derivatives, MinMax, Related Rates, L Hopital s Rule, Integration,
http://www.karlscalculus.org/calculus.html
Karl's Calculus Tutor
Table of Contents
last update 1-Mar-2007 IMPORTANT VIEWING NOTE: To properly view these pages, open your view port out to at least->>>>here If you can't see the word " here " in the line above, place your mouse-cursor on the right-hand edge of the frame, hold the left mouse button, and drag the right-hand edge of the screen to the right until you can see it. See browser notes for more details. click here Section Index 1) Number Systems
2) Limits

3) Continuity

4) Derivatives
...
Online Calculator
From B. Cherkas at CUNY:
Table of Contents
Please note that Karl's Calculus Tutor is still a work in progress. Expect a new unit to come on line every month or so. Currently being drafted: Applications of Integration (Areas)

19. Calculus
Infinitesimals are used when appropriate, and are treated more rigorously than in old books like Thompson s calculus Made Easy, but in less detail than in
http://www.lightandmatter.com/calc/
books > Calculus
This short introductory text focuses mainly on integration and differentiation of functions of a single variable, although iterated integrals are discussed. Infinitesimals are used when appropriate, and are treated more rigorously than in old books like Thompson's Calculus Made Easy , but in less detail than in Keisler's Elementary Calculus: An Approach Using Infinitesimals Numerical examples are given using the open-source computer algebra system Yacas , and Yacas is also used sometimes to cut down on the drudgery of symbolic techniques such as partial fractions. Proofs are given for all important results, but are often relegated to the back of the book, and the emphasis is on teaching the techniques of calculus rather than on abstract results. Download in Adobe Acrobat format - free Buy a printed copy - $7.17 Readers interested in the infinitesimal approach may also want to look at two other online books: Keisler , and A Brief Introduction to Infinitesimal Calculus by Stroyan.

20. QuickMath Automatic Math Solutions
The calculus section of QuickMath allows you to differentiate and calculus is a vast topic, and it forms the basis for much of modern mathematics.
http://www.quickmath.com/www02/pages/modules/calculus/index.shtml
Algebra
Expand

Factor

Simplify
...
Determinant
Graphs
Equations

Inequalities

Numbers
Percentages

Scientific notation

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Calculus
The calculus section of QuickMath allows you to differentiate and integrate almost any mathematical expression.
What is calculus?
Calculus is a vast topic, and it forms the basis for much of modern mathematics. The two branches of calculus are differential calculus and integral calculus. Differential calculus is the study of rates of change of functions. At school, you are introduced to differential calculus by learning how to find the derivative of a function in order to determine the slope of the graph of that function at any point. Integral calculus is often introduced in school in terms of finding primitive functions (indefinite integrals) and finding the area under a curve (definite integrals).
Differentiate
The differentiate command allows you to find the derivative of an expression with respect to any variable. In the advanced section, you also have the option of specifying arbitrary functional dependencies within your expression and finding higher order derivatives. The differentiate command knows all the rules of differential calculus, including the product rule, the quotient rule and the chain rule.

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