Thank you!!! I have had Ap Cal for my pass year and never understood what I was doing or how to do it (no matter how many videos I watch) Tommorrow I have my AP test and I now get it ! Thank you so much!
hi! How did you know that it was one trillionth rounding error? Also, you have a typo at 15:09, you put an extra and. Also, when you said limit, did you mean an actual limit or just a bound? Thanks
If you work out the problem without a calculator, which I did using the quotient rule, you will get an answer of -1/25, which is -0.04. So what the calculator got for an answer, -0.0400000016, is 1.6 times 10^-9, or 1.6 trillionths less than the real answer, and thus a calculator idiosyncracy. As for the typo, I copied the problem from College Board material, but looking at it closely, while maybe awkwardly worded, I can make a case that each of those 3 ands serve a purpose. As for your final question, I said limits as an abreviation of "limits of integration", which is synonomous with bounds of integration. You have a keen eye for detail. I doubt I have had any viewer look as closely at the details of any of my videos so far. BTW, if you do look at more of my videos, which I hope you will do, you will find a lot of mistakes, some of which I notice as serious enough to redo a video. But some errors I just leave in if noticed when I think they're too minor to cause harm. Thanks for viewing and especially for commenting. A student of calculus could learn a lot just from looking at your questions.
honestly impressed with how easily some major headaches of issues can be solved by functions on the calculator
Thank you!!! I have had Ap Cal for my pass year and never understood what I was doing or how to do it (no matter how many videos I watch) Tommorrow I have my AP test and I now get it ! Thank you so much!
Helping me refresh for the test tomorrow; looking for a 5... Thanks!
Harrison Cassar lol if u learned anything new from this video then u most likely got a 1
Connor Maloney refresh=review
@@connormaloney2606 dang bro ur so rude
Thank you this was extremely helpful
Very helpful. Thanks so much for posting!
Glad it was helpful!
hey crammers
Good job guiding us through this!
Hopefully I'm ready for my exam in a few hours...
I hope you did or will do great. Thanks for commenting.
Thank you a lot for the video
excellent video
Thank you!! you rock my guy
Thank you for your words of encouragement.
Hes not ur guy
why is the right limit equal to 0.641....?
Just saved my score fr
test in 3 days and everything here is new. GG boois
how'd it go bro
@@thebillymanjoe got a 3 lol
@@James-ud1if ay nice that's not too bad
Yeehaw brushing up on calculus for college placement exams
Wishing you the best on that test. Thanks for commenting.
hi!
How did you know that it was one trillionth rounding error? Also, you have a typo at 15:09, you put an extra and. Also, when you said limit, did you mean an actual limit or just a bound?
Thanks
If you work out the problem without a calculator, which I did using the quotient rule, you will get an answer of -1/25, which is -0.04. So what the calculator got for an answer, -0.0400000016, is 1.6 times 10^-9, or 1.6 trillionths less than the real answer, and thus a calculator idiosyncracy. As for the typo, I copied the problem from College Board material, but looking at it closely, while maybe awkwardly worded, I can make a case that each of those 3 ands serve a purpose. As for your final question, I said limits as an abreviation of "limits of integration", which is synonomous with bounds of integration. You have a keen eye for detail. I doubt I have had any viewer look as closely at the details of any of my videos so far. BTW, if you do look at more of my videos, which I hope you will do, you will find a lot of mistakes, some of which I notice as serious enough to redo a video. But some errors I just leave in if noticed when I think they're too minor to cause harm. Thanks for viewing and especially for commenting. A student of calculus could learn a lot just from looking at your questions.
great video
I seriously can't believe they are still teaching people on these things.
Where is the cell phone Ap already?
You make an increasingly relevant point. That's the age we live in. For example, I now have an app that mimics this calculator.
@@RealSlopeDude what is it?
@@abdelrahmansobhy983 It's called Wabbitemu. Last time I checked it was only for Android but not ios phones.