ahh, my prof would show us the proofs, but we were not required to know them beyond that. It sounds like my calc 2, was part of your calc 3. Which (calc 2) was the hardest for me. Infinite series, learning trig sub etc.
100%. The hardest part imo was trip integral substitution, finding ie volume, converting from spherical to polar. Couldnt keep all the different formulas straight for the life of me. But thats what happens taking a 6 week summer course.
Connor Bennett
Calc 3 is usually multi not profs.
Easton Long
You'll be fine OP
Grayson Watson
>Not taking Calc III and Linear Algebra simultaneously
Jonathan Robinson
I know that. Calculus 1 and 2 also involved proofs. The topics in Calc 3, multivariable calculus, are just denser. The proofs are exponentially harder and the problems involve much more raw work to complete.
Hudson Perry
>not taking Calc II and Linear Algebra simultaneously
What are you, a pleb?
Also in my uni, Calc IV is called 'Advanced Calculus and Applications' and it involves learning about divergence and rotor, Gauss, Stokes and Green theorems, some introductory Complex Analysis, Fourier series and PDEs.
Is it the same in other universities?
Camden Morgan
No. Most universities split those up to separate classes because the Calc sequence is intended for all stem majors and they'd fail out of engineering and comp Sci if they had to learn more than how to do basic vector calc.
Ryan Morris
>advanced electrodynamics this semester
Aiden Stewart
My uni still has those separate courses.
In Calc IV we just see an introduction to these topics I think.