I learned calculus alone, from a textbook, with no professor and no calculator. That means I had to understand every concept from first principles — no shortcuts, no hand-waving. That's exactly how I teach it.
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Calculus has two main ideas — derivatives and integrals. Everything else is built on top of them. Here's what they actually mean before the formulas get in the way.
Algebra handles things that stay constant. The area of a rectangle doesn't change while you're calculating it. But what if something is changing — a car accelerating, water draining from a tank, a population growing? That's what calculus handles. Calculus is the math of things that change.
Two questions drive all of calculus: how fast is it changing right now (derivative), and how much has it accumulated over time (integral). Every calculus problem is some version of one of those two questions.
A limit asks: what value does a function approach as you get closer and closer to some input — without actually reaching it? You're not asking what happens at x = 2. You're asking what happens as x gets infinitely close to 2 from both sides.
Why do we care? Because some functions do something undefined at a specific point — like dividing by zero — but they behave perfectly well right up until that point. The limit lets you talk about that behavior without stepping on the undefined spot.
Think of it this way: you're walking toward a wall. The limit asks where you're headed, not whether you touch it.
Average speed is easy: distance divided by time. But what's your speed at exactly one instant — not over a minute, not over a second, but at a single frozen moment in time? That's what a derivative gives you.
The definition of the derivative is a limit. You take the slope of a line between two points on a curve, then you shrink the distance between those points toward zero. What the slope approaches as the gap disappears — that's the derivative at that point.
In plain language: the derivative tells you the slope of a curve at any single point. It tells you how fast the function is changing right there, right then.
Once you understand what a derivative is, you need tools to calculate one without going back to the limit definition every time. The power rule is the first and most used tool:
The derivative of x³ is 3x². The derivative of x⁵ is 5x⁴. You pull the exponent down as a multiplier and reduce the exponent by 1. That's it. This one rule handles a huge portion of Calculus I.
If the derivative asks "how fast is it changing?", the integral asks "how much has it added up?" Picture a car's speedometer over time. The derivative reads the speedometer at one instant. The integral adds up all those speeds over time — giving you total distance traveled.
Geometrically, the integral gives you the area under a curve. You're slicing that area into infinitely thin rectangles, adding them all up. The integral sign ∫ is actually a stretched S — short for "sum."
Derivatives and integrals are opposites. One undoes the other. That connection — called the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus — is the central insight of the entire subject.
The Fundamental Theorem of Calculus says: differentiation and integration are inverse operations. If you integrate a function and then differentiate the result, you get back where you started. And vice versa.
This is the moment calculus clicks for most students. The two halves of the subject — which seem completely different — turn out to be the same operation running in opposite directions. That's not a coincidence. It's the whole point.
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Self-taught through multivariable calculus and ordinary differential equations. If you're in a calculus course, I can help — tell me the specific topic and I'll tell you honestly.