@@printezstromanWhen you do Integration by Parts, you Differentiate one part and Integrate the other. The trick is figuring out which part gets which treatment; this is precisely what Pancho did wrong at the board. The rule of thumb is choose the part to Differentiate based on the order: Inverse Trig Functions Logarithimic Functions Algebraic Functions Trig Functions Exponential Functions And the mnemonic device to remember this order is "I LATE."
@@LigierthegreensunThat is the benefit of tabular: it becomes apparant much sooner if the integration is going in a circle. The rule is used even in tabular to skip that bit of brute force and more rapidly identify when a little more creativity is necessary.
@@Mycroft616 yeah I mean the principle is the same as Ibp it just saves you from going down a random hole that doesn’t work. I just finished ordinary differential equations so I’ve had enough integrals to know a trig function won’t go to zero so I just instinctively choose a term to differentiate that will.
@@thanosmaster-abel559 I didn't learn Integration by Parts until Calc II, either. In Calc I, the only integration techniques that we learned were the basic antiderivatives, the functions that we could re-write as functions that we know the antiderivatives of using Algebra/Trig Identities, and then u-substitution.
He was being sarcastic almost calling him dumb cause he showed up late after he told him not to, and gave him a one shot deal at the class. Saying he can’t tell time or doesn’t care.
They normally teach it in college, not high school, but that’s why these kids are exceptional: because he’s teaching it to them while they’re still in high school.
"Do you want me to do it for you???"
"YESSSS."
"...you're supposed to say no!"
🤣
The Yeeeeeeeeesssssssssss part gets me everytime 😂😂😂😂😂
If Angel coming late to Integration by Parts is deliberate wordplay by the writers, that is absolute genius.
How? I’m not a math guy.
@@printezstromanWhen you do Integration by Parts, you Differentiate one part and Integrate the other. The trick is figuring out which part gets which treatment; this is precisely what Pancho did wrong at the board. The rule of thumb is choose the part to Differentiate based on the order:
Inverse Trig Functions
Logarithimic Functions
Algebraic Functions
Trig Functions
Exponential Functions
And the mnemonic device to remember this order is "I LATE."
@@Mycroft616never learned a rule for ibp. Just had to guess and see if anything fell out. Tabular integration helped, though.
@@LigierthegreensunThat is the benefit of tabular: it becomes apparant much sooner if the integration is going in a circle. The rule is used even in tabular to skip that bit of brute force and more rapidly identify when a little more creativity is necessary.
@@Mycroft616 yeah I mean the principle is the same as Ibp it just saves you from going down a random hole that doesn’t work. I just finished ordinary differential equations so I’ve had enough integrals to know a trig function won’t go to zero so I just instinctively choose a term to differentiate that will.
Aye he's doing the tabular method
He’s doing this in calculus one and I’m here learning this in calc 2 😭😭🫡🫡 props to the class
@@thanosmaster-abel559 I didn't learn Integration by Parts until Calc II, either. In Calc I, the only integration techniques that we learned were the basic antiderivatives, the functions that we could re-write as functions that we know the antiderivatives of using Algebra/Trig Identities, and then u-substitution.
@@herbcruz4697 yeah pretty much the same here excerpt the trig functions, that’s calc 2 for me as well
Calc ii was murder
@actuary33 One of my old friends got a nuclear engineer degree, he took Caculus III
1:17 he said 3 but put up 4 fingers
Jaime was being a payaso. :)
What's a payaso?
Tim Rubin Halcomb A clown
I see.
He was being sarcastic almost calling him dumb cause he showed up late after he told him not to, and gave him a one shot deal at the class. Saying he can’t tell time or doesn’t care.
I thought he knew us poor Mexican don't have a telephone 😂😂 if you know the movie quote you know
What
187 😎😏
ONE EIGHT SEVEN
There's a reason it's called 'calculus' - it comes from the word 'pebble', and those are hard!
Angel was working hard, I mean come on Kimo, you're gonna kick him out of the class?
Angel was Kimos favorite let's be real
“I think that guy’s got a bigger problem than you.” 😂
Man whoa I loved stand and deliver
When he hit the chalkboard jajaja
Calculus
How do i reach these kidsss
Keedz
This is easiest part of college math.
Linear Algebra is pain in the ass; Most of problem is related to theory and proofs.
Why do they say Kimosabe? Isn’t that the guy from the Lone Ranger?
Guys anyone here in 2018????
Right here dude haha
Stanley Salvatore ehhyyyyy
Geo Boy m
2023
@@luckydeluca5118 aye my man sry 4yrs late 😂
They didn’t teach calculus in my high school luckily
They normally teach it in college, not high school, but that’s why these kids are exceptional: because he’s teaching it to them while they’re still in high school.
Teh kress eil moss chinguon
Mega, what?
@@valuecalcteh Kress eil moss chinguon
Hahaha. Exactly
Can't spell it either.
Calculus*
Ca-COO-Las
Look at my husband LOL
Olmos or Diamond Philips?
Te crees el más chingon......"s"
What did he say at 1:48?
“Kimo sabe this cabron”
Kimo sabe this cabron
I always thought it was "Kimo solve me this cabron"
Te crees el mas chingon
Dat ass
Can't even SPELL IT !
You can't spell calculus