conversation_id int64 1 206k | help_channel stringlengths 6 7 | __rowid__ stringlengths 32 32 | author_id int64 62,061,868B 1,071,443,446B | author_name stringlengths 2 32 | timestamp stringlengths 19 19 | content stringlengths 0 3.97k | reference.messageId stringclasses 3
values | reference.channelId stringclasses 3
values | reference.guildId stringclasses 1
value | url stringlengths 0 591 | fileName stringlengths 0 513 | student int64 0 1 | helper int64 0 1 | references.id float64 62,061,868B 1,071,056,124B ⌀ | references.name stringlengths 2 32 ⌀ | references.discriminator stringlengths 4 4 ⌀ | references.nickname stringlengths 1 32 ⌀ | references.isBot bool 2
classes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 706,934,233,012,371,600 | Ansh_ | 01/30/2022 00:58:54 | no, for f(x) | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 00:59:34 | I don’t know | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 00:59:50 | I don’t see a discontinuity | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 706,934,233,012,371,600 | Ansh_ | 01/30/2022 01:00:30 | Is sin(2x) = 1 allowed? | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:01:04 | Yea | 1 | 0 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 9431 | TheCookieMOnster | false | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:02:05 | Why not | 1 | 0 | 706,934,233,012,371,600 | Ansh_ | 3502 | Arya | false | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 706,934,233,012,371,600 | Ansh_ | 01/30/2022 01:03:47 | Put sin(2x) = 1 in the f(x) | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:04:08 | Oh | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:04:19 | It doesn’t touch 1? | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 261,933,205,387,477,000 | riemann | 01/30/2022 01:06:30 | you can't divide by zero, right? | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:06:50 | Yea | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 261,933,205,387,477,000 | riemann | 01/30/2022 01:07:20 | 1 / 0 is bad. 1 / `something` is bad if `something=0` . solve for when `something = 0` | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 261,933,205,387,477,000 | riemann | 01/30/2022 01:07:33 | can you figure out what `something` is? | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:07:53 | Something is < 1 | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:08:09 | Wait | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 261,933,205,387,477,000 | riemann | 01/30/2022 01:08:11 | Screen_Shot_2022-01-29_at_10.08.08_PM.png | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 261,933,205,387,477,000 | riemann | 01/30/2022 01:08:18 | `something = ` ? | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:08:20 | It’s actually > 1 | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:08:53 | 1 -sin(2x) | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:08:55 | :soynoo: | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:09:01 | I don’t know | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 706,934,233,012,371,600 | Ansh_ | 01/30/2022 01:20:13 | $1-\sin(2x)=0$ contributes big time to the discontinuity in f(x) | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 510,789,298,321,096,700 | TeXit | 01/30/2022 01:20:15 | **Ansh** | 706934233012371577.png | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | ||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:25:39 | I know 1 = sin (2x ) will be pi/2 | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:25:41 | I think | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:26:16 | Or pi/4 when I divide everything by 2 | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:31:30 | Anywa | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:31:42 | Thanks guys for helping me | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:31:51 | I’ll throw in the towel | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:31:52 | :soynoo: | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
363 | help-10 | 4a9d1dcb37364d50bc3d3eb3f28cc741 | 645,687,109,868,585,000 | TheCookieMOnster | 01/30/2022 01:31:59 | .close | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:34:08 | unknown.png | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:34:16 | anyone know what that means | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:34:30 | unknown.png | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:34:32 | full question btw | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 329,749,386,315,956,200 | Sneaky | 01/30/2022 01:34:47 | probably $(\log_5(18))^2$ | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 510,789,298,321,096,700 | TeXit | 01/30/2022 01:34:49 | **Sneaky** | 329749386315956225.png | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | ||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 329,749,386,315,956,200 | Sneaky | 01/30/2022 01:35:02 | in fact almost certainly that | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:35:15 | so i got | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:35:28 | (4a^2+4ab+b^2)/c | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:35:47 | i also got (4a+2b)/c | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:36:02 | and none of them were correct | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:36:44 | any help | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:38:29 | waittt i know what id id wrong | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:38:37 | its | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:38:41 | (2a+b-c)^2 | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:40:41 | idk its not working | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:43:36 | can someone help | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
364 | help-10 | d418bd47fd834795a6e004f81af5b0ab | 456,226,577,798,135,800 | Deleted User | 01/30/2022 01:49:20 | .close nobodys helping | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:25:55 | i ✨still✨ don’t get why this implies
‘integration is the inverse of differentiation’ | IMG_0362.png | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | ||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 439,286,614,368,452,600 | Buxy | 01/30/2022 02:34:48 | if everything is integrated together, then you have everything, "F", if you differentiate everything from another, then you have something observable in F, but unique to other items belonging to F, i.e. "f" | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:34:48 | i alright watched its animation | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:36:59 | i dont get this at all | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 420,244,167,726,333,950 | kirby your mom | 01/30/2022 02:37:04 | https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/664759/why-is-integration-the-inverse-of-differentiation | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 183,668,144,404,037,630 | Ann | 01/30/2022 02:37:24 | what nonsense is this | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 420,244,167,726,333,950 | kirby your mom | 01/30/2022 02:37:37 | The first answer uses an intuitive approach, might help you | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 439,286,614,368,452,600 | Buxy | 01/30/2022 02:38:03 | :bleakkekw: | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 183,668,144,404,037,630 | Ann | 01/30/2022 02:38:22 | buxy, did you post this _knowing_ it's a nonsensical non-answer to chromium's question? | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 439,286,614,368,452,600 | Buxy | 01/30/2022 02:39:03 | I didn't, that is what I use to explain that integrations is the opposite of differentiations | 0 | 1 | 439,286,614,368,452,600 | Buxy | 0001 | Buxy | false | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:39:35 | Almost sounds like crank speak lol | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 183,668,144,404,037,630 | Ann | 01/30/2022 02:39:35 | @s_chanch if you think of F(x) as the area under the graph of f between a and x, and you nudge x slightly, then the area changes by approximately a rectangle of height f(x) | 0 | 1 | 439,286,614,368,452,600 | Buxy | 0001 | Buxy | false | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 183,668,144,404,037,630 | Ann | 01/30/2022 02:39:42 | there is an illustration that can be made to that effect | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 183,668,144,404,037,630 | Ann | 01/30/2022 02:39:49 | but i don't have the energy to do that | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:39:54 | i know it | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:40:01 | and i still don’t get it | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:40:10 | @s_chanch are you trying to understand intuitively or rigorously why they’re inverses | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:40:27 | rigorously | 1 | 0 | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 2633 | s_chanch | false | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:40:42 | well, i don’t really get it intuitively either | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:40:45 | Do you understand why the statement of FTC 1 means they’re inverses? | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:40:50 | i get d/dx (integral) = f | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:40:56 | not integral (d/dx) = f | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:41:05 | this is my question | 1 | 0 | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 2633 | s_chanch | false | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:41:08 | i can even prove it | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 183,668,144,404,037,630 | Ann | 01/30/2022 02:41:17 | so you want to know why int[a,b] f'(x) dx = f(b)-f(a)? | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:41:26 | wait | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:41:38 | this is ftc2?? | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:42:59 | This is a corollary of FTC1 | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:43:11 | what | 1 | 0 | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 8527 | a.b.s._.0. | false | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:43:14 | If you scroll down a little on the Wikipedia article, it says that | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:43:22 | (do u know what a corollary is) | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:43:46 | (no) | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:44:00 | (something that follows directly from another thm?) | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:44:34 | (Precisely) | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:45:00 | Lol so I assume the “inverse” concept is referring to FTC1 | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:45:31 | Because FTC2 almost always is talking about the computation $$\int_a^b f(x)dx = F(b) - F(a)$$ | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 510,789,298,321,096,700 | TeXit | 01/30/2022 02:45:45 | **abs\_0** | 307070375735459842.png | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | ||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:47:21 | FTC1 says that $$\frac d{dx} \int_a^x f(t) dt = f(x)$$ | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 510,789,298,321,096,700 | TeXit | 01/30/2022 02:47:23 | **abs\_0** | 307070375735459842.png | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | ||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:47:25 | @s_chanch | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:47:33 | yea | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:47:41 | So wait what are you asking again lol | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:48:46 | why integration reverses differentiation | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:48:56 | differentiation is ‘instantaneous rate of change’ | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:49:05 | integration is ‘area under curve’????? | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 01/30/2022 02:49:12 | how the hell are they inverses lol | 1 | 0 | 701,895,792,763,600,900 | s_chanch | 2633 | s_chanch | false | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:50:18 | Ah so you’re asking about intuition | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:50:35 | Good luck with that lmao | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:50:44 | It’s one of the hardest things to get intuitively imo | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 307,070,375,735,459,840 | abs_0 | 01/30/2022 02:51:19 | Just play around with this idea on your own @s_chanch and it’ll make some sense | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null | |||||
365 | help-10 | d8b842f4e0a64afb952cef54909e6d8e | 334,482,942,506,041,340 | Zybikron | 01/30/2022 02:51:47 | integration over an interval (meaning [a,b] where a and b are numbers, or maybe infinities) is area under a curve. Otherwise integration results in a function that is the antiderivative. That's what FTC1 says. | 0 | 1 | null | null | null | null | null |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.