09-06-2004, 07:32 PM | #4 (permalink) |
Psycho
Location: Atlanta, GA
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Yeah I found DiffEQs pretty easy, but then again my professor wasn't very difficult either. And yes partial DiffEQs tend to be much harder than the ordinary ones. All you really need to know from calculus for diffs is basically just how to differentiate and how to integrate. It's pretty straight-forward material. You do a lot with integrating/differentiating logs if i remember correctly. Just study and you shouldn't have many problems.
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09-06-2004, 07:43 PM | #5 (permalink) |
Without Wings
Location: Australia
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i'm taking a subject heavy in ODE's this semester, and as people have said, know your differentiation/integration rules and techniques, and you'll pick it up easily.
only identities i've had to commit to memory have been the hyperbolic trig function identities. the remainder i've retained from high school maths. with the exception of polar co-ordinates & applications of polar integration, because i'd never seen them before, and the class had assumed knowledge in them, its been a pretty cruisy run. from what i hear, i'm glad i'm jumping ship before hitting PDE's. |
09-08-2004, 06:18 AM | #7 (permalink) |
Psycho
Location: Cow Country, CT
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maybe i am way late, but i would say you dont need to review much... ODE sort of stands alone from calc 1 2 3. what you remeber right now from those classes is probably enough.
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Tags |
differential, equations, ordinary |
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