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Oh noes.... its Trig

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I ate your Sex

PostPosted: Tue Sep 12, 2006 12:25 pm


Wow, I can't find a good lesson on it anywhere.
Help?
I'm a quick learner, I just want the basics.

[ps im only in 9th grade xd so please be understanding. Im trying my best to catch up and learn calculus this year]
PostPosted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 12:34 am


Okays, lessee:

First off, radians vs. degrees: 2*pi radians = 360 degrees = 1 full circle.

There are two functions that make up all of standard trig: sine and cosine (usually shortened to sin and cos respectively).
Okay, given a right triangle, take one of the non-right vertices, label it A and label the angle at that vertex x. Note that x is bounded by 0 and pi/2 in radians, and by 0 and 90 in degrees.
Let a denote the length of the side opposite vertex A, let c denote the length of the hypotenuse, and let b denote the length of the remaining side.
Then sin(x) = a/c and cos(x) = b/c.

Another way to look at it is by picturing a unit circle centered at the origin of the coordinate plane. Pick a point X on the circle, and denote by x the angle, measuring counterclockwise, between a ray from the origin through X and a ray from the origin along the positive x-axis.
Then cos(x) is the x coordinate of X and sin(x) is the y coordinate of X.
Note that by Pythagoras' theorem, (cos(x))^2 + (sin(x))^2 = 1 for all x.
Note also that, in radians, cos(pi/2-x) = sin(x), and in degrees, cos(90-x)=sin(x).

Now there are four other basic trig functions, all expressable in terms of sin and cos.

Tangent: tan(x) = sin(x)/cos(x)
Secant: sec(x) = 1/cos(x)
Cosecant: csc(x) = 1/sin(x)
Cotangent: cot(x) = cos(x)/sin(x)

The other four trig functions also show up on the circle.

See picture:

User Image - Blocked by "Display Image" Settings. Click to show.

Layra-chan
Crew


Dr. Leonard McCoy

PostPosted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 11:30 am


I did trig too early in life... I am relearning it for cal... It upsets me so... I was great at it in high school. crying
PostPosted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 6:48 am


Layra-chan
User Image - Blocked by "Display Image" Settings. Click to show.


best diagram ever.

jestingrabbit


nonameladyofsins

PostPosted: Tue Sep 19, 2006 6:03 am


jestingrabbit
Layra-chan
User Image - Blocked by "Display Image" Settings. Click to show.


best diagram ever.


I second that. It's like the god of trig diagrams, it's got everything.
PostPosted: Tue Sep 19, 2006 9:08 pm


The pic is from some MIT trig page

Layra-chan
Crew


I ate your Sex

PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 4:37 pm


Oh My God.
THANK YOU!

That seriously helped me alot more than my math teacher could have.
I mean, he's a good teacher, but his accent is so thick I can't understand xd

I copied all that in my dorkbook right next to my quantum mechanics notes.. Thats a very good place to be xd whee
PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 6:51 pm


I ate your Sex
Oh My God.
THANK YOU!

That seriously helped me alot more than my math teacher could have.
I mean, he's a good teacher, but his accent is so thick I can't understand xd

I copied all that in my dorkbook right next to my quantum mechanics notes.. Thats a very good place to be xd whee


Wait...hwah? You're learning QM without knowing trig?
I mean, I guess it's possible (except you mentioned that you also don't know calculus, so I'm very wondering) if you learn abstract algebra without touching trig...? (butbutbut, what about SO(n)? SU(n)? U(1)? Meep.)
It's not impossible. My friend somehow learned ring and field theory without learning about groups, but it's just extremely strange, at least to me.

Layra-chan
Crew


I ate your Sex

PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 7:00 pm


Layra-chan
I ate your Sex
Oh My God.
THANK YOU!

That seriously helped me alot more than my math teacher could have.
I mean, he's a good teacher, but his accent is so thick I can't understand xd

I copied all that in my dorkbook right next to my quantum mechanics notes.. Thats a very good place to be xd whee


Wait...hwah? You're learning QM without knowing trig?
I mean, I guess it's possible (except you mentioned that you also don't know calculus, so I'm very wondering) if you learn abstract algebra without touching trig...? (butbutbut, what about SO(n)? SU(n)? U(1)? Meep.)
It's not impossible. My friend somehow learned ring and field theory without learning about groups, but it's just extremely strange, at least to me.

Its different, I can say that...
Its like, a small child understanding alot of words, but being oblivious to any adultry, but the second they learn about it, its suddeny everywhere they look...
{{at least thats what happened to me xd }}

I pick up some high level books and work through them, but some of the stuff is really "fuzzy"
Then after I learn the fundementals later, I understand why it works, and its like "OOHHHH!!!"

I was taught Algebra when I was 5 years old, but didn't understand long division until 3rd grade xd
I've been like this my entire life
PostPosted: Tue Sep 26, 2006 6:53 pm


I ate your Sex
Layra-chan
I ate your Sex
Oh My God.
THANK YOU!

That seriously helped me alot more than my math teacher could have.
I mean, he's a good teacher, but his accent is so thick I can't understand xd

I copied all that in my dorkbook right next to my quantum mechanics notes.. Thats a very good place to be xd whee


Wait...hwah? You're learning QM without knowing trig?
I mean, I guess it's possible (except you mentioned that you also don't know calculus, so I'm very wondering) if you learn abstract algebra without touching trig...? (butbutbut, what about SO(n)? SU(n)? U(1)? Meep.)
It's not impossible. My friend somehow learned ring and field theory without learning about groups, but it's just extremely strange, at least to me.

Its different, I can say that...
Its like, a small child understanding alot of words, but being oblivious to any adultry, but the second they learn about it, its suddeny everywhere they look...
{{at least thats what happened to me xd }}

I pick up some high level books and work through them, but some of the stuff is really "fuzzy"
Then after I learn the fundementals later, I understand why it works, and its like "OOHHHH!!!"

I was taught Algebra when I was 5 years old, but didn't understand long division until 3rd grade xd
I've been like this my entire life


From my experiences, and the experiences of everyone else I know, basic algebra is much easier than long division to learn (not in the least because everyone just uses their calculator instead...but then comes polynomial division).

And what does a large vocabulary have to do with adultry[sic] (I'm assuming that you meant adultery, as that's the closest word, even though it doesn't fit)?

Dave the lost


yoyoman1_7

PostPosted: Sat Oct 14, 2006 7:18 pm


poweroutage
jestingrabbit
Layra-chan
User Image - Blocked by "Display Image" Settings. Click to show.


best diagram ever.


I second that. It's like the god of trig diagrams, it's got everything.


Third that.

My unit circle only had Sine and Cosine on it.

That thing you showed kicks a**.
Reply
Mathematics

 
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