enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Additional Mathematics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Additional_Mathematics

    Additional Mathematics is a qualification in mathematics, commonly taken by students in high-school (or GCSE exam takers in the United Kingdom). It features a range of problems set out in a different format and wider content to the standard Mathematics at the same level.

  3. CRC Standard Mathematical Tables - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CRC_Standard_Mathematical...

    The 30th edition (1996) was renamed CRC Standard Mathematical Tables and Formulae, with Daniel Ian Zwillinger as the editor-in-chief. [2] The 33rd edition (2018) was renamed CRC Standard Mathematical Tables and Formulas. [3]

  4. Newton–Cotes formulas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton–Cotes_formulas

    It is assumed that the value of a function f defined on [,] is known at + equally spaced points: < < <.There are two classes of Newton–Cotes quadrature: they are called "closed" when = and =, i.e. they use the function values at the interval endpoints, and "open" when > and <, i.e. they do not use the function values at the endpoints.

  5. Edexcel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edexcel

    As Edexcel is the only privately owned examination board in the UK, questions have been raised on whether the examination board is acting in the best interest of students, or solely as a profit making business, due to the wide range of Edexcel-endorsed text books published by Pearson, the international multi-billion company which owns the board.

  6. GCSE - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GCSE

    In 1994 the A* grade was added above the grade A to further differentiate attainment at the very highest end of the qualification. This remained the highest grade available until 2017, when numerical grades were introduced (see below). The youngest pupil to gain an A* grade was Thomas Barnes, who earned an A* in GCSE Mathematics at the age of 7 ...

  7. Mathematical notation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical_notation

    Mathematical notation is widely used in mathematics, science, and engineering for representing complex concepts and properties in a concise, unambiguous, and accurate way. For example, the physicist Albert Einstein 's formula E = m c 2 {\displaystyle E=mc^{2}} is the quantitative representation in mathematical notation of mass–energy ...

  8. Lists of integrals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_integrals

    More compact collections can be found in e.g. Brychkov, Marichev, Prudnikov's Tables of Indefinite Integrals, or as chapters in Zwillinger's CRC Standard Mathematical Tables and Formulae or Bronshtein and Semendyayev's Guide Book to Mathematics, Handbook of Mathematics or Users' Guide to Mathematics, and other mathematical handbooks.

  9. List of mathematical functions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mathematical_functions

    Dirac delta function: everywhere zero except for x = 0; total integral is 1. Not a function but a distribution, but sometimes informally referred to as a function, particularly by physicists and engineers. Dirichlet function: is an indicator function that matches 1 to rational numbers and 0 to irrationals. It is nowhere continuous.