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Kelley W. The Humongous Book of Trigonometry Problems 2012
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Textbook in PDF format
Most math and science study guides are a reflection of the college professors who write them: dry, difficult, and pretentious. The Humongous Book of Trigonometry Problems is the exception. Author Mike Kelley has taken what appears to be a typical trigonometry workbook, chock full of solved problemsâmore than 750!âand made notes in the margins adding missing steps and simplifying concepts and solutions, so what would be baffling to students is made perfectly clear. No longer will befuddled students wonder where a particular answer came from or have to rely on trial and error to solve problems. And by learning how to interpret and solve problems as they are presented in a standard trigonometry course, students become fully prepared to solve those difficult, obscure problems that were never discussed in class but always seem to find their way onto exams.
The best way to develop trigonometry skills is by working out trigonometry problems. Thereâs no denying it. If you could figure this class out just by reading the textbook or taking good notes in class, everybody would pass with flying colors. Unfortunately, the harsh truth is that you have to buckle down and work problems out until your fingers are numb.
Most textbooks only tell you what the answers to their practice problems are but not how to do them! Sure your textbook may have 175 problems for every topic, but most textbooks only give you the answers. That means if you donât get the answer right youâre totally out of luck! Knowing youâre wrong is no help at all if you donât know why youâre wrong. Math textbooks sit on a huge throne, like the Great and Powerful Oz and say, âNope, try again,â and you do. Over and over, usually getting the problem wrong. What a delightful way to learn! (Letâs not even get into why they only tell you the answers to the odd problems. Does that mean the bookâs actual author didnât even feel like working out the even ones?)
Even when math books try to show you the steps for a problem, they do a lousy job. Math people love to skip steps. Youâll be following along fine with an explanation and then all of a sudden bam, youâre lost. Youâll think to yourself, âHow did they do that?â or âWhere the heck did that 42 come from? It wasnât there in the last step!â Why do math textbooks insist that in order to work out a problem on page 200, youâd better know pages 1 through 199 like the back of your hand? You donât want to spend the rest of your life on homework! You just want to know when youâre supposed to use the law of sines and when youâre supposed to use the law of cosines, which youâll learn in Chapter 13.
Just about every single kind of trigonometry problem you could possibly run into is in here. After all, this book is humongous! If 750 problems arenât enough, then youâve got some kind of crazy math hunger, my friend, and Iâd seek professional help. This practice book was good at first, but to make it great, I went through and worked out all the problems and took notes in the margins when I thought something was confusing or needed a little more explanation. I also drew little skulls next to the hardest problems, so youâd know not to freak out if they were too challenging. After all, if youâre working on a problem and youâre totally stumped, isnât it better to know that the problem is supposed to be hard? Itâs reassuring, at least for me.
Introduction
Angles and Arcs
Right Triangle Trigonometry
The Unit Circle
Trigonometric Values of General Angles
Graphing Sine and Cosine Functions
Graphing Other Trigonometric Functions
Basic Trigonometric Identities
Advanced Trigonometric Identities
Inverse Trigonometric Functions
Simple Trigonometric Equations
Advanced Trigonometric Equations
Area of Triangles and Sectors
Oblique Triangle Laws
Vectors
Basic Vector Operations
Advanced Vector Operations
Parametric Equations and Polar Coordinates
Trigonometry of Complex Numbers
Appendicies
Table of Trigonometric Values
The Unit Circle
Formulas and Identities