Difference between revisions of "Cedars Math:Handouts"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(→Using LaTeX to Write Equations and Symbols) |
(→Chapters 1: Integers) |
||
Line 38: | Line 38: | ||
*[http://www.rasmusen.org/special/Cedars_School/02_08b_Prime_Proof_handout.pdf Handout on Euclid's proof.] | *[http://www.rasmusen.org/special/Cedars_School/02_08b_Prime_Proof_handout.pdf Handout on Euclid's proof.] | ||
+ | |||
+ | *[http://www.rasmusen.org/special/Cedars_School/02.08d_2_exponent.pdf] Defining New Kinds of Exponents] | ||
---- | ---- |
Revision as of 05:00, 7 October 2022
Click here to go back to the Cedars Math front page.
Contents
General Skills
Python Coding
- I've written up a handout of some Python code for testing divisibility by 2,3,5, and 7.
- The Python code by Professor Connell to test the Polya Conjecture.
Miscellaneous Skills
- Handout on writing emails
- CLT tests: Fall 2018 questions and Fall 2018 answers and Spring 2021 questions.
Using LaTeX to Write Equations and Symbols
*Handout: Rotating Symbols in Latex, and How to Find A Computer Command You Don't Know.
Chapters 1: Integers
- The "All Odd Numbers Are Prime" joke and the joke script and the Python code by Professor Connell to test the Polya Conjecture.
- [1] Defining New Kinds of Exponents]
Chapters 2 and 3: Fractions
- Proofs without Words of three infinite sums.
Chapters 4, 5, and 6
Chapter 8, Geometry
- Prefaces to Euclid's Elements in the first English translation (1570).
- Shooting the Bird from the Mahabharata.