Single variable calculus / Gerald L. Bradley, Karl J. Smith.
By: Bradley, Gerald L.
Contributor(s): Smith, Karl J.
Material type:
BookPublisher: [S.l.] : Prentice Hall, 1999Edition: 2nd ed.Description: 1 v. (unpaged) ; 26 cm.ISBN: 0134361059 (hardcover); 9780134361055 (hardcover).Online resources: Amazon.com Summary: This text was the first written to blend much of the best aspects of calculus reform with the reasonable goals and methodology of traditional calculus. While incorporating much of calculus reform, Calculus, 2/e does not "throw the baby out with the bath water." Calculus should not be a terminal course, but rather, one that prepares students in engineering, science, and math to move on to more advanced and necessary career or professional courses. This text addresses topics such as continuity, the mean value theorm, l'Hopital's rule, parametric equations, polar coordinates, sequences, and series. In short, this text is an attempt at Reform with Reason. The second edition now features the total integration of transcendental functions right from the beginning of the text, as well as expanded coverage of differential equations, including slope fields in Chapter 5.
| Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books
|
Central Library, QUEST, Nawabshah
Welcome to the Central Library, QUEST, Nawabshah, Sindh, Pakistan |
515SMI (Browse shelf) | Available | 40873 |
Browsing Central Library, QUEST, Nawabshah Shelves Close shelf browser
| No cover image available | ||||||||
| 515RUD Real and Complex Analysis | 515RUD Real and Complex Analysis | 515SHA Differential Calculus | 515SMI Single variable calculus / | 515SMI Calculus : Multivariable | 515STE Multivariable Calculus | 515STE Multivariable Calculus |
This text was the first written to blend much of the best aspects of calculus reform with the reasonable goals and methodology of traditional calculus. While incorporating much of calculus reform, Calculus, 2/e does not "throw the baby out with the bath water." Calculus should not be a terminal course, but rather, one that prepares students in engineering, science, and math to move on to more advanced and necessary career or professional courses. This text addresses topics such as continuity, the mean value theorm, l'Hopital's rule, parametric equations, polar coordinates, sequences, and series. In short, this text is an attempt at Reform with Reason. The second edition now features the total integration of transcendental functions right from the beginning of the text, as well as expanded coverage of differential equations, including slope fields in Chapter 5.
Books
There are no comments for this item.