• Log InLog In
  • Register
Liquid`
Team Liquid Liquipedia
EDT 11:05
CET 16:05
KST 00:05
  • Home
  • Forum
  • Calendar
  • Streams
  • Liquipedia
  • Features
  • Store
  • EPT
  • TL+
  • StarCraft 2
  • Brood War
  • Smash
  • Heroes
  • Counter-Strike
  • Overwatch
  • Liquibet
  • Fantasy StarCraft
  • TLPD
  • StarCraft 2
  • Brood War
  • Blogs
Forum Sidebar
Events/Features
News
Featured News
[ASL21] Ro24 Preview Pt1: New Chaos0Team Liquid Map Contest #22 - Presented by Monster Energy7ByuL: The Forgotten Master of ZvT30Behind the Blue - Team Liquid History Book19Clem wins HomeStory Cup 289
Community News
Weekly Cups (March 16-22): herO doubles, Cure surprises3Blizzard Classic Cup @ BlizzCon 2026 - $100k prize pool48Weekly Cups (March 9-15): herO, Clem, ByuN win42026 KungFu Cup Announcement6BGE Stara Zagora 2026 cancelled12
StarCraft 2
General
Potential Updates Coming to the SC2 CN Server What mix of new & old maps do you want in the next ladder pool? (SC2) Blizzard Classic Cup @ BlizzCon 2026 - $100k prize pool Weekly Cups (March 16-22): herO doubles, Cure surprises Weekly Cups (August 25-31): Clem's Last Straw?
Tourneys
Sparkling Tuna Cup - Weekly Open Tournament World University TeamLeague (500$+) | Signups Open RSL Season 4 announced for March-April WardiTV Team League Season 10 KSL Week 87
Strategy
Custom Maps
[M] (2) Frigid Storage Publishing has been re-enabled! [Feb 24th 2026]
External Content
The PondCast: SC2 News & Results Mutation # 518 Radiation Zone Mutation # 517 Distant Threat Mutation # 516 Specter of Death
Brood War
General
ASL21 General Discussion RepMastered™: replay sharing and analyzer site mca64Launcher - New Version with StarCraft: Remast BGH Auto Balance -> http://bghmmr.eu/ Soulkey's decision to leave C9
Tourneys
[ASL21] Ro24 Group C [Megathread] Daily Proleagues [ASL21] Ro24 Group B 2026 Changsha Offline Cup
Strategy
Fighting Spirit mining rates Simple Questions, Simple Answers Soma's 9 hatch build from ASL Game 2
Other Games
General Games
General RTS Discussion Thread Nintendo Switch Thread Stormgate/Frost Giant Megathread Path of Exile Dawn of War IV
Dota 2
Official 'what is Dota anymore' discussion The Story of Wings Gaming
League of Legends
G2 just beat GenG in First stand
Heroes of the Storm
Simple Questions, Simple Answers Heroes of the Storm 2.0
Hearthstone
Deck construction bug Heroes of StarCraft mini-set
TL Mafia
TL Mafia Community Thread Five o'clock TL Mafia Mafia Game Mode Feedback/Ideas Vanilla Mini Mafia
Community
General
US Politics Mega-thread Canadian Politics Mega-thread Russo-Ukrainian War Thread European Politico-economics QA Mega-thread Things Aren’t Peaceful in Palestine
Fan Clubs
The IdrA Fan Club
Media & Entertainment
[Req][Books] Good Fantasy/SciFi books Movie Discussion! [Manga] One Piece
Sports
2024 - 2026 Football Thread Cricket [SPORT] Formula 1 Discussion Tokyo Olympics 2021 Thread General nutrition recommendations
World Cup 2022
Tech Support
Laptop capable of using Photoshop Lightroom?
TL Community
The Automated Ban List
Blogs
Funny Nicknames
LUCKY_NOOB
Money Laundering In Video Ga…
TrAiDoS
Iranian anarchists: organize…
XenOsky
FS++
Kraekkling
Shocked by a laser…
Spydermine0240
Unintentional protectionism…
Uldridge
ASL S21 English Commentary…
namkraft
Customize Sidebar...

Website Feedback

Closed Threads



Active: 1706 users

Preparing for university

Blogs > Ian Ian Ian
Post a Reply
1 2 Next All
Ian Ian Ian
Profile Blog Joined August 2009
915 Posts
August 17 2011 21:35 GMT
#1
I am going to university for mathematical physics after taking some time off from school, and I am a little worried that I wont do that well because I am rusty. I am taking first year calculus stuff. What kinds of units would you guys suggest I review before going? I have my calc textbook that I have briefly looked through and I don't really like the way it is written but if necessary I can use that.

***
RHCPgergo
Profile Blog Joined June 2005
Hungary345 Posts
August 17 2011 22:00 GMT
#2
I don't really know anything about mathematical physics, but here's some advice. You should check out the homepage of the university you will be attending to, there might be some useful info. You might find the subjects you will get into through the first semester, recommended books, maybe even some notes about the lectures. There can also be separate sites that contain study material.

Once the semester starts, try to seek the help of older students who know how things work and can give you specific info about subjects, professors, ways to learn, exams, all kinds of useful stuff.
Augury
Profile Blog Joined September 2008
United States758 Posts
August 17 2011 22:04 GMT
#3
I'm also going to be taking Calc II after being away from school for a while, so I'd also welcome suggestions on getting caught up. Thanks for any help. I assume the same topics will apply as for Calc I, but with some review of Calc I as well.
knyttym
Profile Blog Joined December 2006
United States5797 Posts
August 17 2011 22:13 GMT
#4
+ Show Spoiler +


I used this channel for my linear algebra course because my professor was horrible. Being alone in the comfort of my own room made the material much simpler. Not sure how the calc version though.
TheNessman
Profile Blog Joined May 2009
United States4158 Posts
August 17 2011 22:21 GMT
#5
TRIG.
know these: sin(0) sin(pi) cos(0) cos(pi)
and also know geometry, like area / perimeter of basic shapes.

hmm besides that you'll just need to know how to solve problems. which is hard.

be ready to put effort into it, especially if you want a good grade. and you can always turn to TL for help if you need it!
~~! youtube.com/xmungam1 !~~
thOr6136
Profile Blog Joined July 2009
Slovenia1775 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-08-17 22:29:39
August 17 2011 22:28 GMT
#6
i am going to university this year too, gonna study maths. I guess it will be damn hard but fuck it, i hope i can manage it and work hard enough, but thats hard for my lazy ass TT And i also hope there will be enough time for sc2 and aikido <_< Time management will be key.
duckett
Profile Blog Joined June 2009
United States589 Posts
August 17 2011 23:28 GMT
#7
ah I wish I was in your position, but it's a little late for me now.

math at the instructional level of most single variable calc courses/a good deal of the online stuff will be about learning specific tools to handle specific problems. but despite the physics in front of the name, mathematical physics will mostly involve learning math more broadly for the sake of learning math; it's the domain of mathematicians who have nowhere else to apply their skills.

you should start with a good real analysis book that you can stomach; Rudin is a classic but I prefer Kolmogorov. you need it to tell you a story and make you eagerly want to turn the next page to find out what will next be uncovered; just buffing up on the technical stuff will only get you so far.
funky squaredance funky squaredance funky squaredance
Malgrif
Profile Blog Joined March 2010
Canada1095 Posts
August 17 2011 23:36 GMT
#8
if it's first year, don't worry about it too much. in my calc class they went over EVERYTHING pretty slowly, so as long as you know what functions are and standard algebra techniques (simplification of polynomials, how to put fractions in proper form ie no roots in the denominator, and how to factor) you'll do fine even if you don't remember a thing from calc.
for there to be pro there has to be noob.
TimmyMac
Profile Joined December 2008
Canada499 Posts
August 17 2011 23:44 GMT
#9
First year is pretty easy going. If you can't follow you probably aren't cut out for upper year courses in my experience.
Sufficiency
Profile Blog Joined October 2010
Canada23833 Posts
August 17 2011 23:45 GMT
#10
Mathematical physics? Are you sure? The only thing out of this field is a PhD on it, and it's a very difficult field.
https://twitter.com/SufficientStats
n.DieJokes
Profile Blog Joined November 2008
United States3443 Posts
August 18 2011 00:34 GMT
#11
On August 18 2011 08:45 Sufficiency wrote:
Mathematical physics? Are you sure? The only thing out of this field is a PhD on it, and it's a very difficult field.

It's his first year, he'll figure it out
MyLove + Your Love= Supa Love
Ian Ian Ian
Profile Blog Joined August 2009
915 Posts
August 18 2011 04:57 GMT
#12
I know what courses I'm taking, I just haven't done a math problem in over a year.. so I'm a little rusty. I forget alot of what I learned in my high school calculus class :/

Any suggestions of where I can find like.. practice questions or something? My textbook seriously sucks so much dick, its useless.

And I might switch into pure physics later on, we will see. There are a lot of promising co op jobs in my area, I am going to Waterloo, and the IQC and PI are right beside it.
Sufficiency
Profile Blog Joined October 2010
Canada23833 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-08-18 06:07:39
August 18 2011 05:54 GMT
#13
Maybe I misunderstood you, but when you say "mathematical physics", to my mind as someone who has a master degree in mathematics, this is a MATHMATICS field, not a physics field. Surely, the things you study may have motivation from physics, but it unfortunately has little actual physics in it. Also this is a graduate-level field; you can ask a math PhD student what he does, and he may say "mathematical physics". This typically embodies things such as Lie algebra, differential topology, differential geometry, PDE, etc.. It's not an undergraduate-level field as far as I know. Anyways, if a PhD is your plan, you should read on:

Sorry to burst your bubble, but physics is a *HORRIBLE* field for a PhD.... Physics used to be a popular field in the earlier part of 20s century, but now it's old and too hard.

If you want to go to graduate school and eventually get a PhD in a field, I strongly recommend you to switch to mathematics instead for undergrad. At least it's a bit more general and wider in scope. According to one of my friends who graduated from PKU physics, most of his colleagues have ditched the field - even though PKU has arguably the strongest students in the world thanks the China's rigourous exams.


In my humble opinion, an undergraduate degree in physics (and NOT in engineering) can give you the following three options:

1. Get a PhD in physics; become a professor (but like I said, research in physics is EXTREMELY hard)
2. Become a high school teacher and teach high school level physics (but for that, you don't actually NEED a degree in physics)
3. Do a mathematically related field after you graduate, such as actuary, etc. (but in that case, you might as well get a degree in statistics)

If you are job-oriented and want your undergraduate degree to be your terminal degree, you should consider going into mathematics (for something theoretical) or actuarial science (for something practical). University of Waterloo has an awecome co-op program, but it's not omnipotent; if you start out in a poor field you will find yourself in a trouble.


EDIT: since you are going into mathematics or a related field, you are likely to be taking a theoretical calculus course in your first year at Waterloo. You should find out which textbook you will be using (most likely it's Spivak's Calculus, similar to what is used at University of Toronto for MAT157, or Stewart's Calculus Early Trancedentals for MAT137). Either way, I think the best thing you can do is just go straight into the course material and preview it. This will give you a serious edge when school starts in September.
https://twitter.com/SufficientStats
Ian Ian Ian
Profile Blog Joined August 2009
915 Posts
August 18 2011 13:38 GMT
#14
Thanks for the advice.

At Waterloo there are actually 2 MathPhys programs, a science one and a math one. Each one focuses more on their own courses. I am currently in the math one.

And yes, I will be taking Math137, and that's what I'm worried about. Not really thinking about long term at all, just going into this class. I am kicking myself now for not taking very consistent notes in my highschool calculus class, and am just looking for somewhere where I can find some practice questions or something like that. My textbook has far too much explanation and not enough practice imo, and I'd rather use something else.
Stratos_speAr
Profile Joined May 2009
United States6959 Posts
August 18 2011 14:26 GMT
#15
On August 18 2011 06:35 Ian Ian Ian wrote:
I am going to university for mathematical physics after taking some time off from school, and I am a little worried that I wont do that well because I am rusty. I am taking first year calculus stuff. What kinds of units would you guys suggest I review before going? I have my calc textbook that I have briefly looked through and I don't really like the way it is written but if necessary I can use that.


I hardly think you should have much to worry about. Almost every college out there eases you into the work when you first start since you won't be used to the work load. Not only that, calculus is pretty easy compared to the math that you'll eventually be doing, so you won't be starting off with things that are overly difficult.
A sound mind in a sound body, is a short, but full description of a happy state in this World: he that has these two, has little more to wish for; and he that wants either of them, will be little the better for anything else.
lac29
Profile Blog Joined December 2008
United States1485 Posts
August 18 2011 14:28 GMT
#16
That youtube vid may prove really helpful for me ... thanks!
Cruncharoo
Profile Blog Joined March 2011
United States136 Posts
August 18 2011 14:38 GMT
#17
For calc II you need to really know your trig identities well. Try to memorize as many of those as you can, fill out the first page of your math notebook with all identities so when you are doing your homework you can reference that.
TheGiz
Profile Blog Joined October 2010
Canada708 Posts
Last Edited: 2011-08-18 14:52:49
August 18 2011 14:43 GMT
#18
Having taken 6 math courses as a part of my engineering degree (and every other course involving just as much calculus anyway), I can say that what you should do is just review all of high school math. (I, at the very least, kept all my notes from high school - lessons included.) Anyone with half a brain can cover 4 grades of stuff and thus learn all the required calculus for first year in about a week.

Also be prepared to work. Math courses (i.e. all of math, engineering, and physics) require you not to study notes but to do innumerable problems as practice. That is the only way to study. First year calculus doesn't stretch far from the grade 12 stuff, but it is still quite difficult if you don't do the work.

On August 18 2011 14:54 Sufficiency wrote:
In my humble opinion, an undergraduate degree in physics (and NOT in engineering) can give you the following three options:
  1. Get a PhD in physics; become a professor (but like I said, research in physics is EXTREMELY hard)
  2. Become a high school teacher and teach high school level physics (but for that, you don't actually NEED a degree in physics)
  3. Do a mathematically related field after you graduate, such as actuary, etc. (but in that case, you might as well get a degree in statistics)
If you are job-oriented and want your undergraduate degree to be your terminal degree, you should consider going into mathematics (for something theoretical) or actuarial science (for something practical). University of Waterloo has an awesome co-op program, but it's not omnipotent; if you start out in a poor field you will find yourself in a trouble.

Augmenting this...
  1. Surely you must know that outside of teaching and god-awful research a PhD in physics is almost useless. Don't expect a lot of pay with this degree.
  2. Also don't expect to get a teaching job in Canada in the next 20 years. EVERYBODY goes into teaching. Hell, Brock University alone will ensure that the field is saturated until the end of civilization.
  3. Consider specializing or falling back on something financial. Actuary is a good one. Finance will never die and is an extremely complicated field with a lot of potential payout for the right kinds of people.
Life is not about making due with what you have; it's about finding out just how much you can achieve. Never settle for anything less than the best. - - - Read my blog!
Zorkmid
Profile Joined November 2008
4410 Posts
August 18 2011 14:50 GMT
#19
On August 18 2011 06:35 Ian Ian Ian wrote:
I am going to university for mathematical physics after taking some time off from school, and I am a little worried that I wont do that well because I am rusty. I am taking first year calculus stuff. What kinds of units would you guys suggest I review before going? I have my calc textbook that I have briefly looked through and I don't really like the way it is written but if necessary I can use that.


If you're just starting, you don't really need to prepare THAT much.

Everything you're going to learn will be new.

My first year Calc course covered everything I already knew in the first class or two.

Just go ready to learn!

Don't fall behind!
SarR
Profile Joined June 2011
476 Posts
August 18 2011 14:53 GMT
#20
Check out this guy's youtube channel. He really knows how to make you understand math. He also has some vids on certain aspects of physics.
1 2 Next All
Please log in or register to reply.
Live Events Refresh
Next event in 8h 55m
[ Submit Event ]
Live Streams
Refresh
StarCraft 2
LamboSC2 386
TKL 201
SteadfastSC 115
trigger 38
StarCraft: Brood War
Britney 72426
Sea 27476
Calm 5078
Jaedong 2207
Mini 628
Horang2 542
EffOrt 503
Rush 486
Light 450
ZerO 322
[ Show more ]
ggaemo 303
actioN 292
firebathero 278
Snow 263
Soma 262
Mind 87
ToSsGirL 84
Sharp 82
Barracks 61
Pusan 56
Backho 54
sorry 35
Aegong 35
Noble 29
zelot 20
910 19
Nal_rA 18
Rock 17
Terrorterran 17
Bale 17
ajuk12(nOOB) 16
IntoTheRainbow 15
GoRush 13
ivOry 5
eros_byul 1
Dota 2
Gorgc7762
BananaSlamJamma225
Counter-Strike
kennyS898
byalli563
adren_tv41
Other Games
singsing2087
B2W.Neo975
hiko725
Lowko339
crisheroes320
RotterdaM186
Fuzer 170
Hui .152
DeMusliM123
ArmadaUGS110
XaKoH 98
mouzStarbuck89
Rex73
QueenE70
ZerO(Twitch)20
Organizations
Dota 2
PGL Dota 2 - Main Stream36
StarCraft: Brood War
Kim Chul Min (afreeca) 6
StarCraft 2
Blizzard YouTube
StarCraft: Brood War
BSLTrovo
sctven
[ Show 15 non-featured ]
StarCraft 2
• poizon28 22
• AfreecaTV YouTube
• intothetv
• Kozan
• IndyKCrew
• LaughNgamezSOOP
• Migwel
• sooper7s
StarCraft: Brood War
• FirePhoenix4
• BSLYoutube
• STPLYoutube
• ZZZeroYoutube
Dota 2
• WagamamaTV729
League of Legends
• Nemesis2353
• TFBlade635
Upcoming Events
Replay Cast
8h 55m
KCM Race Survival
17h 55m
The PondCast
18h 55m
WardiTV Team League
20h 55m
OSC
20h 55m
Replay Cast
1d 8h
WardiTV Team League
1d 20h
RSL Revival
2 days
Cure vs Zoun
herO vs Rogue
WardiTV Team League
2 days
Platinum Heroes Events
2 days
[ Show More ]
BSL
3 days
RSL Revival
3 days
ByuN vs Maru
MaxPax vs TriGGeR
WardiTV Team League
3 days
BSL
4 days
Replay Cast
4 days
Replay Cast
4 days
Afreeca Starleague
4 days
Light vs Calm
Royal vs Mind
Wardi Open
4 days
Monday Night Weeklies
5 days
OSC
5 days
Sparkling Tuna Cup
5 days
Afreeca Starleague
5 days
Rush vs PianO
Flash vs Speed
Replay Cast
6 days
Afreeca Starleague
6 days
BeSt vs Leta
Queen vs Jaedong
Liquipedia Results

Completed

Proleague 2026-03-24
WardiTV Winter 2026
Underdog Cup #3

Ongoing

KCM Race Survival 2026 Season 1
BSL Season 22
CSL Elite League 2026
CSL Season 20: Qualifier 1
ASL Season 21
Acropolis #4 - TS6
RSL Revival: Season 4
Nations Cup 2026
NationLESS Cup
BLAST Open Spring 2026
ESL Pro League S23 Finals
ESL Pro League S23 Stage 1&2
PGL Cluj-Napoca 2026
IEM Kraków 2026
BLAST Bounty Winter 2026
BLAST Bounty Winter Qual

Upcoming

2026 Changsha Offline CUP
CSL Season 20: Qualifier 2
CSL 2026 SPRING (S20)
Acropolis #4
IPSL Spring 2026
BSL 22 Non-Korean Championship
CSLAN 4
Kung Fu Cup 2026 Grand Finals
HSC XXIX
uThermal 2v2 2026 Main Event
IEM Cologne Major 2026
Stake Ranked Episode 2
CS Asia Championships 2026
Asian Champions League 2026
IEM Atlanta 2026
PGL Astana 2026
BLAST Rivals Spring 2026
CCT Season 3 Global Finals
IEM Rio 2026
PGL Bucharest 2026
Stake Ranked Episode 1
TLPD

1. ByuN
2. TY
3. Dark
4. Solar
5. Stats
6. Nerchio
7. sOs
8. soO
9. INnoVation
10. Elazer
1. Rain
2. Flash
3. EffOrt
4. Last
5. Bisu
6. Soulkey
7. Mini
8. Sharp
Sidebar Settings...

Advertising | Privacy Policy | Terms Of Use | Contact Us

Original banner artwork: Jim Warren
The contents of this webpage are copyright © 2026 TLnet. All Rights Reserved.