<p>You don’t need to be brilliant to move the exponents in front of the terms and then lower the exponents by one, then set the whole thing to zero. Just takes knowing how to take the simplest kind of derivative… ;-)</p>
<p>accounting would work fine for me then, since i had to google what the heck polynomial was
but i havent learned all the english words in math yet so i blame that. the numbers is also a english, so i blame that aswell.</p>
<p>I know, right? Just the other day I was reading through a buddy of mine’s proof and he kept using “recursive” and “recursively enumerable” interchangeably. It’s like he wasn’t even sure what the difference was or something.</p>
<p>The weird thing is, after a good laugh at his expense and explaining where he went wrong, he couldn’t understand why I was so tickled by it. Some people, I tell you.</p>
<p>Not gonna lie, I don’t even know what recursively enumerable means… then again I am not a programmer as you are… crazy CS majors.</p>
<p>I don’t know how things works out in Colleges in USA, so I am going to ask this incredibly stupid question.</p>
<p>Does the proffesor go through on how to solve the different math problems? polynomial and etc etc.</p>
<p>:) thanks</p>
<p>Isn’t that the point of taking a class? The professor’s job is to teach you how to solve said problems.</p>
<p>Not everywhere in the world. They give you assignments and thats it, your on your own.</p>
<p>And you pay for that? No wonder all the foreigners try to come here for school.</p>
<p>As homer would of said: USA! USA! USA!</p>
<p>Polynomial, is there alot of that in accounting? What more is there alot of?</p>
<p>Shoot I don’t know, I am an engineer. Polynomials are pretty much the most basic math equation you could have though, so they will be all over the place in just about every subject that involves math in any way shape or form.</p>
<p>You guys are funny as hell…“if you are bad at math, study hard and you will get good”…isn’t it apparent this guy doesn’t like math? Didn’t he say that? Just don’t take a math-related major. Try some liberal arts or business or something like that, but it definitely sounds like neither Engineering or Accounting are for you.</p>
<p>SLightManifesto, I stand with my statement before. If something is difficult or frustrating, hard work is the answer; not quiting and taking the easy road. Most of the things worth while in life will require hard work</p>