Linear versus Exponential Growth and Decay

Calculus 1, Lectures 3A and 3B

For f(x)=2\cdot 1.5^{x}, f(x+2)=1.5^{2}f(x), no matter what x is. The exponential function is converting addition of inputs to multiplication of outputs.

Linear functions are constructed from the arithmetic building blocks of repeated addition and subtraction. In a similar manner, exponential functions are constructed from repeated multiplication and division.

These sentences describe both the most basic similarity … Read the rest

Points, Coordinates, Skew Coordinates, and Graphs

Visual Linear Algebra Online, Chapter 1: Vectors, Matrices, and Linear Transformations (The First Chapter of an Online Textbook)

Section 1.1 (Referring to this Blog Post Titled “Points, Coordinates, Skew Coordinates, and Graphs” Above)

Determining the coordinates of two points in (slanted) skew coordinates.

What is the point? Wait a minute — that’s not the question I meant to

Read the rest