<p>YO!</p>
<p>So I'm going to take Calculus III next year. Should I keep my old Calc AB and BC notes?</p>
<p>Stay cool like the other side of the pillow. :)</p>
<p>YO!</p>
<p>So I'm going to take Calculus III next year. Should I keep my old Calc AB and BC notes?</p>
<p>Stay cool like the other side of the pillow. :)</p>
<p>I’m doing what I think would be Calc III next year (It’s called Calc and Analytical Geometry IV, but it’s at a uni, so I guess they have weird names). I’m saving my BC notes, so I think that’d be a good idea for you too maybe.</p>
<p>I’m taking it next year. Not sure how it will go.</p>
<p>It won’t help you. Calc III is kinda different. Just make sure you know BC Calc really well. Calc III is basically an extension of Calc II (BC calc), with double/triple integrals, partial implicit differentiation, gradients, etc. you won’t really need your BC calc notes though.</p>
<p>i’d usually just look stuff up in a textbook if i didn’t remember it,
but i guess if you don’t have your textbook
you might want to keep your notes</p>
<p>and besides…they’re nostalgic</p>
<p>Nostalgic. Good one. All those hours of my life…drained by Calculus… Ha ha ha</p>
<p>It was pretty neat though. How is Calculus III compared to Calculus I and II?</p>
<p>In terms of toil, work load, complexity, and fun(?) ?</p>
<p>CALC III IS NOT FUN >_<</p>
<p>think of calc I
but in more dimensions</p>
<p>at least the concepts are easier because you’ve seen them before,
well at least i think it’s easier</p>
<p>it is easy. don’t stress out over it.</p>
<p>We’re talking about multi, right?</p>
<p>Eh, I didn’t.</p>