I'm currently doing a course that is calculus of a single variable. The calculus tools currently at my disposal are a chapter on Riemann's sums, and an introduction to the first and second parts of the fundamental theorem of calculus. I noticed that the part that looks like gibberish to me...
that's not a calculus problem.
To solve it, simply remember that a factorial (some value such as 9 with an exclamation mark afterwards) means that you would take it to be (9x8x7x6x5x4x3x2x1). Since in your question you have another value in the denominator that is a factorial smaller than 9...
Hi guys I'm doing my homework and I've run into a couple problems that I don't quite understand, and the textbook doesn't give me much information to form an intuitive understanding of what's going on here so I don't know where to begin.
The question is of the form:
Using the fundamental...
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