It's amazing to think how much welfare a single person's free work can add to the world. Basically FOSS but for learning math. I used this site ~12 years ago when taking calculus courses, and more recently I put it as a recommended resource on my syllabi when teaching those same courses. Apparently many others benefitted as well. A gift for exposition + selflessness + a permanent domain name (I'm guessing, due to his job at a university) = profit for everyone.
I had the honor of being a student of his. I was a high school student while attending college there thanks to a Texas program for gifted kids. As a professor he’s quite the character with his beard and his rat tail and his funny mannerisms. If you think his online notes are good, well, his lectures were an order of magnitude better those of than any other calculus class I’ve been part of. I wish he would make them available online.
This is effectively the best reference notes on the internet for calculus 1, calculus 2, calculus 3, and differential equations. You can definitely become proficient in these subjects on those notes alone, with practice. Paul’s Online Math Notes were my main reference material back in 2008-2009 in university. I am glad to see that it is still very popular.
The absolute best Calculus book for undergraduates majored in the formal engineering disciplines is Calculus, 6th edition, by Swokowski, Olinick, and Pence.
ISBN-10: 0534936245
ISBN-13: 978-0534936242
My (fraternal) twin brother used this book to teach himself calculus 2 in preparation for another course he needed to take. There are lots of supplementary materials that you can get for the book, like solutions manuals, study guides, and even a linear algebra supplement (although the latter is hard to find—I should probably scan all of the materials)
Funny seeing this here, but a decade ago, this professor's differential equations explanations saved me from endlessly meandering through tough engineering lectures and dense math textbooks. I'm frankly curious to know if undergraduates and high school students still use this...
I just graduated university this year and used the site in high school and a little bit in university (just freshman year calculus). I don't remember how I found the site, either I was Googling math stuff, or a friend was and sent me a link. Many friends in high school and university used the site, it's definitely still popular. A high school teacher may have recommended it as well. It's a great site.
why are differential equations so difficult? it would seem even smart people struggle with understanding them. Is the problem is how they are taught or is the concept inherently hard/ It should not be that hard given that we're taking 'rates of change' broadly speaking, yet it is.
Even among the engineering-oriented lower division math courses, material in differential equations courses is both antiquated and presented like a laundry list. This essay is more than 20 years old now, but the complaints are basically as relevant today.[1]
Both. They are taught, generally speaking, by giving a series of techniques to solve problems without the underlying mathematics (i.e why those techniques work on those problems). Calculus generally takes some time to grok, which typically doesn't have unless your really into it. Think how many people fail to grasp exponential growth (the simplest ODE).
In the last year of my Aerospace Engineering degree. This site got me through calculus and I still use it any time a differential equation shows up in my studies since they still scare me.
I used this when I took differential equations while working on my math major (graduated in 2016). It's simply invaluable for the anxious, confused student.
This site was more useful to me than €300 of textbooks during my undergrad. I had to purchase two books so I could submit the homework, and in all honesty, I learned nothing from them, very little from the lectures. Almost all of my library algebra and at least my first 4 calc courses we're handled by Paul (and khan academy occasionally)
I wish I could donate something to keep this site up and running. Really admire people who spent their time creating a useful resource like this and sharing it for FREE with the public for common good. I hope I will have free time one day (when I retire) to do something like that for the subject that I'm interested in.
Dr. Dawkins was my calc. 2, 3, and differential equations professor when I went to school for engineering.
He's an absolute treasure as far as teaching goes, and I don't think I'd be as successful and skillful at math had I not had him as my instructor. He's insanely energetic and positive in the classroom, and he's basically perfected the art of getting "math" into other people's heads.
I've never been to Lamar, so maybe you know something I don't, but there's no sense in which Lamar is a small school. It's probably several times the average US university.
It was small from about 1986 till the early 2000's. During that time they had the only undefeated football team in the Southland conference. Population shot up over the last two decades when they started losing games.
Aww man, I got stuck with Lauffer. I somehow never got to registration before Dawkins was full. I wanted to take Price too; some people didn't like him, but he's a legend.
Never thought I’d see this here. I started studying Calculus I from here before I started university. It’s really amazing how well structured and written these notes are. No video lectures needed to understand.
I didn’t attend a single lecture for Calc I and II in school and still did okay all thanks to this professor.
When he teaches in person, he literally reads these notes and writes them on the board. He revises his notes based on questions he gets in class when something doesn't click for students. He's been teaching for over 20 years now so they're very polished at this point.
Piling on to the praise here, but I cannot explain how much this site has helped me go from a C+ high school math student failing my first year of college calculus, to majoring in statistics, and now being a math teacher myself. Truly one of the best resources on the internet.
While I realize I am just repeating the sentiment that others have already shared, I would like to do so in case Paul sees this and realizes how many people he has helped.
Best content online about Calc I, II, III and DiffEq. Hands down.
First you learn basic calculus. Then you learn advanced calculus. Then you learn how to apply what you've learned to more than one dimension. The second one is actually the hardest of the three.
Never thought I'd see Paul's Notes on the front of HN. My classmates and I used it so often when we learned calculus in high school, and it still is useful at the university level for multivariable, vector calculus and differential equations. Huge kudos to Paul.
Paul's Online Math Notes were an invaluable resource in relearning math as a lawyer trying to start a career as a software developer. Relearning math seemed a lost cause until I discovered Paul's notes. Thanks so much!
Great stuff. Well witten notes with clear and extensive examples. I actually used this just a few months ago to pass my calculus exam. Feel like I learnt a lot more than from my overly dense and formal textbook.
The thing I appreciated the most when I was self-learning math was the answers where he explained the steps cogently, which was incredibly helpful in seeing where I went off the rails or got stuck.
Great notes. Now my question is whether there's some sort of standard for what's in Calc 1, 2, 3...
I've seen a number of people on the internet refer to them, but it doesn't seem clear to me what the numbers mean. Wouldn't this be different depending on where you were? And yet people talk casually about the numbers instead of the topics (first order diff eqs).
I'm European, did my degree in the UK, and never came across any standardized numbering.
I have tutored people taking Calc 1, 2 and 3 at several universities in the US.
There's no exact standard that I'm aware of, but they tend to closely align at different universities. Dividing James Stewart's Calculus into three parts is a reasonable guide: you can see the contents on Amazon preview.
I'd expect solving first order linear differential equations would be solidly in Calc 2.
For the most part people talk about calc in the following way: Calc 1 is differential calculus (and maybe basic integrals), Calc 2 is integral calculus, and Calc 3 is multivariate calculus (plus potentially vector calc).
Differential equations are usually a separate topic split into ODEs and PDEs.
In college I used a mix of these and PatrickJMT's videos on Youtube.
The awesome thing about Patrick's YT channel is that he walks through a plethora of examples for all kinds of concepts. So if you're more of a hands-on learner who doesn't absorb as much when your instructor just lectures without showing/demonstrating a concept, then the channel is a great supplementary tool.
I wouldn't have made it to my degree in CS without his content.
I enjoyed math in high school and some of college, but I could never understand, and it wasn't explained, how to apply it to anything in my life, so I thought of it as basically just fun puzzles and after finishing the required classes I majored in something else.
Decades later, I'd like to start learning it again but still want to know how to apply it for practical purposes. Where can I find this kind of approach?
Seconding many here, I used these 10+ years ago in my Calc, Diff Eq, and Linear Algebra classes. Far superior to many of the texts I had to work with. So glad people are still getting value out of it. I remember checking a couple years ago expecting it to be taken down for some reason and happy to be wrong.
I could write this exact sentence out and it still be true :D
Seriously, a great collection of notes. These were easily the most well written, thought out, understandable & digestible notes I ever came across during my studies.
Blows most textbooks and professors out of the water
Mathworld is good to search for relatively wacky stuff (As is Wikipedia - you can sometimes find niche results squirrelled away in the depths of a big article), but as a resource for learning it's not great.
It is true that outside of Calculus (through to real and complex analysis) and Linear Algebra the density of good teaching material online decreases
10/10, would have not made it through diff EQ without this site. Had to self teach because of constant professor changes. So lucky I found this site in 2012.