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by ryandv
1031 days ago
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My question was more rhetorical and for _synchronicity's_ sake than anything; I wanted to see what sort of replies would pop out. As a recreational student, I've already committed to this text, difficulty be damned. I am no stranger to intellectual masochism. Nor do I care one iota for an "academic career," only for an understanding of results that were taken for granted in my prior CS mathematics undergraduate education at UWaterloo, which involved a few years of formal proof. Would that I could have finished said undergraduate program, but tuition is expensive, and being rendered homeless partway through a CS program certainly complicates the financing, especially absent the monetary privileges afforded to one of a more affluent upbringing. I appreciate the elitist and somewhat exclusionary language, though, despite admitted lack of knowledge regarding my situation. |
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Like most textbooks, Rudin it has focused exercises, examples to build intuition, and proofs with little steps removed, not free-range problems. Thebanswe to a problem is based on the 20 previous pages in the text.
How to Solve It is like advice for solvimg a jigsaw puzzle (edges first, sort by shape and color and texture, ...) It is for solving problems after you've learned a whole year(s) of material, and don't know which of your knowledge contains the pieces of the answer. It's a way of searching through your knowledge and evaluating which pieces are useful for the problem at hand, and how they fit together.