Homework
Number | Due date | Questions | Solutions |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Feb 1 | PDF | PS | PDF | PS |
2 | Feb 6 | PDF | PS | PDF | PS |
3 | Feb 13 | PDF | PS | PDF | PS |
4 | Feb 20 | PDF | PS | PDF | PS |
5 | Mar 6 | PDF | PS | PDF | PS |
6 | Mar 13 | PDF | PS | PDF | PS |
7 | Mar 20 | PDF | PS | PDF | PS |
8 | Apr 10 | PDF | PS | PDF | PS |
9 | Apr 17 | PDF | PS | PDF | PS |
10 | Apr 24 | PDF | PS | PDF | PS |
11 | May 3 | PDF | PS | PDF | PS |
Exam-related handouts
Exam | Samples | Sample solutions | Exam | Exam solutions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Midterm 1 | PDF | PS | PDF | PS | PDF | PS | PDF | PS |
Midterm 2 | PDF | PS | PDF | PS | PDF | PS | PDF | PS |
Final | PDF | PS | PDF | PS | PDF | PS | PDF | PS |
A note about writing
If you read any textbook or scientific article, you will see that there is a standard way of writing mathematics, in which equations form part of full sentences and occur naturally with the flow of the text. While completely optional, you may wish to practice this in writing your homework. In general, the solutions posted here try to adhere to this standard.
One way to write mathematics like this is to make use of the free software package LATEX, which can produce very high quality scientific documents, and is used extensively by mathematicians, physicists, and engineers. There is an excellent guide, The Not So Short Introduction to LATEX2ε, which can be used to get started. The homework assignments and solutions are all written in LATEX.