What do you want to know? If you have any MATH1081 questions, post them in the "Apreciation of Maths" sub form in the MATH4U forum ...Originally posted by cyrax83
any 1081 gurus want to teach a noob ?
hey iv got him as wellOriginally posted by ace
I got J.D. Steele for my tutorial for Discrete Maths. He's a short bald guy. He doesn't look scary or strict to that matter!
Who's this directed at?Originally posted by underthesun
How'd u all do in the discrete test? I guess class tests are never meant to be that hard
Yes you should.Originally posted by underthesun
Hey, those 9s looks good enough.. (what happened there in the middle?)
BTW, just a question, at one of these sets questions, when you're trying to simplify some statements like (A^c U B)^c, do you have to provide the laws in the steps? (e.g universal laws, idempotent laws etc...)
As sunny said, yes you do need to note laws (think Circle Geo in maths)Originally posted by underthesun
Hey, those 9s looks good enough.. (what happened there in the middle?)
BTW, just a question, at one of these sets questions, when you're trying to simplify some statements like (A^c U B)^c, do you have to provide the laws in the steps? (e.g universal laws, idempotent laws etc...)
Yes! Its normal....I remember one test most people got like 2/10.Originally posted by underthesun
pity about your dips.. does many others experience this? so would it be "normal" to get 4 and 5s if everyone gets it too?
(my hunt for brownie points have stunned my mathematical capabilities)
You're kidding! wow.. and I was thinking discrete is easier than calculus.. (those limits are annoying)Originally posted by sunny
2/10.