Thank you. To get even more help, subscribe to the numericalmethodsguy channel, and go to MathForCollege.com/nm and MathForCollege.com/ma for more resources and share the link with your friends through social media and email. Follow my numerical methods blog at AutarKaw.org.
Thanks for this clear and informative lecture. I was tempted to skip it, thinking that even a neophyte such as myself understands linear interpolation ! But I'm glad that I didn't because the basic concepts and definitions presented here helped me to better understand other things that I'd previously read about quadratic and cubic interpolation.
Kids these days have no excuse not to be passing math. I wish I had UA-cam back in the early 90's to help with tutoring in college. Instead, I had an insane teacher with grad students who didn't know how to explain things either.
As I understood, u can't predict the y of some dot which have the x-coordinate, lets say x, if x is not in the interval (x0,xn)... Is there a way to predict such y. Langrange's interpolation is getting pretty wild after this given interval, so is there a way to get a real function after given Xs and Ys, which would give a real Ys after given interval of Xs...?
This is actually the best explanation on youtube by far.
Excellent explanation .. Had this on my mind since so many days ... you made it very very clear and easy to understand. Thank you Sir!
This guy is my new hero now. Good job
Thank you.
To get even more help, subscribe to the numericalmethodsguy channel, and go to MathForCollege.com/nm and MathForCollege.com/ma for more resources and share the link with your friends through social media and email.
Follow my numerical methods blog at AutarKaw.org.
Thanks for this clear and informative lecture. I was tempted to skip it, thinking that even a neophyte such as myself understands linear interpolation ! But I'm glad that I didn't because the basic concepts and definitions presented here helped me to better understand other things that I'd previously read about quadratic and cubic interpolation.
Wow 😳 15 yrs video and still valid
Kids these days have no excuse not to be passing math. I wish I had UA-cam back in the early 90's to help with tutoring in college. Instead, I had an insane teacher with grad students who didn't know how to explain things either.
I used to thnk the same 😔
ok boomer
Very good explanation. Thank you sir.
Thank you for this. It was explained very well
Thanks for the video, this was very informative.
quite good explained :)
so those round splines where even the following points interact with each other are cubic splines..?
Brilliant! As usual...
Great lectures! Thank you very much.
Appreciate this video. Thanks numericalmethodsguy!
thanks, i'll check out the example now.
Thanks for the video. Can you please also put a video on cubic splines?An example on using the formula!
Thank you so much!
Ah 240p we meet again
Thanks really helped
As I understood, u can't predict the y of some dot which have the x-coordinate, lets say x, if x is not in the interval (x0,xn)... Is there a way to predict such y. Langrange's interpolation is getting pretty wild after this given interval, so is there a way to get a real function after given Xs and Ys, which would give a real Ys after given interval of Xs...?
Thankyou sir.
excellent very clear now before i was like out to water
Thank you very much :-) really informative
Thank you!
Great. Thank you.
Hi
How solve b.v.p by cubic spline method.
thank you
How prove Pn(x) of newton equal Pn(x) of Lagrange
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gracias, mucha ayuda
2019 🙏🙏
how did I get here?
Sir you teaches so bad not clear explanation
Thank you for your kind comment. Use multiple platforms and sources to learn. mathforcollege.com/nm/topics/spline_method.html
Thanks for the video. Can you please also put a video on cubic splines?An example on using the formula!
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