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by mlyle
1145 days ago
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I think a lot of things use calculus concepts, even if calculus isn't explicitly invoked. A whole lot of finance and pharmacology are about exponential functions and their derivatives and integrals, for instance. A whole lot of fields use optimization, even if "just asking the computer to do it", etc. I admit I am weaker now in calculus and linear algebra because I lean on CAS and simulation a lot... but at least I know how it works so that I have an idea of what I'm doing. |
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I spent a chunk of my career optimizing FDMs and FEMs, but above and beyond that I haven't had a great need for Calculus until I started doing some deep learning. Again, very particular subfields.
And I suspect the work that you're talking about is exactly what I was thinking about when I wrote that even if Calculus is needed, it's the stuff taught in the first semester.