Calculus/Acknowledgements
< Calculus
Acknowledgements
editPortions of this book have been copied from relevant Wikipedia articles.
Contributors
editIn alphabetical order (by surname or display name):
- Aaron Paul (AKA Grimm)
- "Professor M." (no user page available)
- Chaotic llama
- User:Cronholm144
- User:Fephisto
- User:Juliusross
- User:Rgdboer (Hyperbolic angle)
- User:Stranger104
- User:Whiteknight
Further Reading
editThe following books list Calculus as a prerequisite:
Other Calculus Textbooks
editOther calculus textbooks available online:
- Calculus Refresher by Paul Garrett, notes on first-year calculus (PDF/TeX).
- Difference Equations to Differential Equations: An Introduction to Calculus by Dan Sloughter, available under a Creative Commons license (PDF).
- The Calculus of Functions of Several Variables by Dan Sloughter, available under a Creative Commons license (PDF).
- Lecture Notes for Applied Calculus (PDF) by Karl Heinz Dovermann, first-semester calculus without using limits.
- Elements of the Differential and Integral Calculus by William Granville (1911), a classic calculus textbook now available online in various forms. (It is also partially available at Wikisource.)
- Calculus (3rd Ed., 1994) by Michael Spivak, is a more rigorous introductory calculus textbook.
- Top-down Calculus by S. Gill Williamson, available under a Creative Commons license (PDF).
Other printed calculus textbooks:
- Apostol, Tom M. Calculus.; This two-volume set provides a rigorous introduction to calculus.
Using infinitesimals
edit- Elementary Calculus: An Approach Using Infinitesimals (2nd Ed., 1986) by H. Jerome Keisler, an out-of-print nonstandard calculus textbook now available online under a Creative Commons license (PDF).
- Yet Another Calculus Text by Dan Sloughter, an introduction to calculus using infinitesimals available under a Creative Commons license (PDF).
- Calculus by Benjamin Crowell, an introduction to calculus available under a Creative Commons license (PDF). Also see Crowell's "Five Free Calculus Textbooks" (2004) review on Slashdot.
Interactive Websites
edit- Online interactive exercises on derivatives
- Visual Calculus - Interactive Tutorial on Derivatives, Differentiation, and Integration
- Planet Math: A wiki-style math reference.
Other Resources
edit- Notes on Integration Techniques: Structured, comprehensive lecture notes scanned and uploaded to Wikimedia Commons.