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I'm probably an atypical calculus learner. I'm middle aged and brushing up on my math(s)/physics so I can do audio DSP, understand the acoustics/physics of musical instruments, and explore patterns in nature - all for personal/artistic reasons rather than job-related (for now :-)).

I had an "a-ha" moment when I came across Ivan Savov's "No Bullshit Guide to Math and Physics" about 6 weeks ago in terms of finding a resource that meets my needs perfectly. I personally find it useful to work through a certain number of problems by hand so I understand the concepts, as well as how folks did the work before the advent of computers. I'm also the kind of person who will type out examples by hand when learning a new computer language so I can get a feel for it.

https://minireference.com/static/excerpts/noBSguide_v5_previ...

I find learning calculus & physics together is a good mix for me especially in light of my musical/DSP interests. FWIW just in these 6 weeks - I've been able to read through things like Claude Shannon's classic Theory of Information or Manfred Schroeder's books on chaos/fractals and number theory and get the gist of the math in a way I couldn't before.




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