<p>For some reason, I'm not all that impressed.
I've never really liked textbooks that read like outlines -- they just seem so brusque...this is one of many reasons I preferred Stewart to Larson (the book our school used), and don't like studying out of test prep books.</p>
<p>I like learning from outlines, tables, etc., so I'll probably be using that document when I finally get to multivariable...</p>
<p>Yeah, I really like outlines since my attention span sucks. I'm starting to try "study this textbook for hours a day" plans - and sometimes I feel like I've made NO PROGRESS just because I've been glaring over the words. I could take notes though (but even then, it often feels like copying down individual words without visual recognition of them). </p>
<p>Especially outlines with applications (this one, in fact, had a chart on nonstandard analysis - analysis where "close to" can be marked with infinitesimals and represented by x ~ x, not with epsilon-delta defiitions! It explained why infinitesimal theory hasn't gone mainstream - for political reasons that have dealt with those who have introduced nonstandard analysis. This chart was full of other really nice applications (applications to PDEs and to physics).</p>
<p>And it had a really nice and short proof of the heat equation using methods from multivariable (a lot of the other PDE books use different methods that aren't as comprehensible =/)</p>
<p>The bottom parts of that pdf are my favorite parts</p>