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by heinrichhartman 2759 days ago
Prof. Manfred Lehn has some very good advice on his web-site (in German):

http://www.alt.mathematik.uni-mainz.de/Members/lehn/le/semin...

Here is the Google Translate transcript:

"""

How do you read mathematical texts?

If you are ready to give a seminar lecture in your studies, you have already studied one or two semesters and read one or the other book and know what is important: If you read mathematical texts, there are two modes in which You can proceed: From the bird's eye view: What are the rough lines? What is the subject of the present text? What are the central concepts and definitions, what are the central statements and sentences? What are the rough evidence structures? Why do you do it all? From a frog's perspective: how is it done in detail? How does a proof work? Why do you need the prerequisites in the sentence? What happens if you leave them out? You often have to switch between these modes. First, one has to get an overview of where one is actually going, otherwise one bites oneself in the first technical lemma and gets stuck. At the first reading one can skip all the evidence and focus on the statements of the sentences. At some point, however, comes the point where one no longer understands the sentences, because one has developed no feeling for the introduced concepts. Then it's time to take a closer look at the evidence as well. If you have understood more technical details, you should step back a bit and ask yourself again what the overall context is, etc. In an adapted form, this also applies to the way you approach individual sentences or examples. If you are confronted with a new sentence, you may ask questions of the following kind before, after, or even while studying your proof: What are simple examples of the sentence (such as special cases)? What are simple counterexamples where certain conditions are not met? Does the sentence, or the term used or the proof, refer to already known things? Is there a characteristic example of observing all the essential phenomena? Work in circles in the literature to your presentation (and his position in the seminar).

"""

(You have to swap the word "sentence" with (mathematical) "proposition" or "theorem" at some places for this to make more sense. In german those are the same word ("Satz").)