Functions blows up

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Calculus [Early Transcendental Functions]
Thanks. :-D That book seems to be written in plain English. It might be a good text, but it is prohibitively expensive. :shock:

Incidentally, are the first six chapters intended for high school students?
 
Incidentally, are the first six chapters intended for high school students?

I don't think so. It is a complete calculus text as all others and quite thick.

Thanks.
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That book seems to be written in plain English. It might be a good text, but it is prohibitively expensive.
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By plain, do you mean simple [level with respect to language] or bad or at least clumsy? Why do you interested in that text so much? Aren't all texts quite similar to each other?
 
Aren't all texts quite similar to each other?
I believe that almost all of the calculus texts published in Japan are much more concise than your quoted one.
 
I believe that almost all of the calculus texts published in Japan are much more concise than your quoted one.

I have never even seen a Japanese author who wrote a calculus text. All of them I have seen was either American or German. However does the above imply Japan has good books? Do you have any international publisher releasing books in English such as American Mc-Graw Hill, Wiley or German Springer?
 
Do you have any international publisher releasing books in English such as American Mc-Graw Hill, Wiley or German Springer?
Yes. I own the following books:

Weil: Number Theory for Beginners (Springer)
Lang: Linear Algebra (Springer)
Lang: Algebra (Springer)
Artin: Algebra (Pearson)
Rotman: Introduction to Group Theory (Springer)
Artin: Galois Theory (Dover)
Spivak: Calculus on Manifolds (CRC Press)
Munkres: Analysis on Manifolds (CRC Press)
Rudin: Principles of Mathematical Analysis (McGraw Hill)
Apostol: Mathematical Analysis (Addison Wesley)
Carmo: Differential Geometry of Curves and Surfaces (Dover)
Munkres: Topology 2nd ed. (Prentice Hall)
Kelly: General Topology (Springer)
Spanier: Algebraic Topology (Springer)
Munkres: Elements of Algebraic Topology (Westview Press)
Whitehead: Homotopy Theory (Springer)
Hirsh: Differential Topology (Springer)
Carmo, Riemannian Geometry (Birkhäuser)
Hartshorne: Algebraic Geometry (Springer)
Boothby: Introduction to Differentiable Manifolds and Riemannian Geometry (Academic Press)
Barra: Introduction to Measure Theory (Van Nostrand Reinhold)
 
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Do you have any international publisher releasing books in English such as American Mc-Graw Hill, Wiley or German Springer?

Yes. I own the following books:

I am afraid I couldn't ask what I meant to ask again. I meant to ask that whether or not Japan has its own publishing companies and whether or not they are as good as American and German books.
 
Do you have any international publisher releasing books in English such as American Mc-Graw Hill, Wiley or German Springer?
Does that mean "Does Japan have ..."? If so, my answer is "Not that I know of".
 
Does that mean "Does Japan have ..."? If so, my answer is "Not that I know of".

If you are a Japanese living in Japan, I think that you should have known whether they existed or not.
 
Why are you interested in that text so much?
Because I would like to get familiar with some mathematical terminology used in elementary mathematics.
 
I believe that almost all of the calculus texts published in Japan are much more concise than your quoted one.
I've just noticed "concise" is not the right word. I meant "... much more densely written than ...". I apologize.
 
Because I would like to get familiar with some [STRIKE]mathematical[/STRIKE] terminology used in elementary mathematics.
Is calculus considered elementary mathematics in Japan?:shock:

It wasn't inflicted on me until I was 16.
 
Is calculus considered elementary mathematics in Japan?:shock:

It wasn't inflicted on me until I was 16.
Why could not? Cannot elementary apply to the almost all things such as calculus? Elementary calculus, elementary differential equations etc.
 
You mentioned 'elementary mathematics', not 'elementary calculus'.

If calculus is a branch of mathematics, hence is elementary calculus not elementary mathematics?
 
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