How can i get the solutions manual to james stewart Calculus Early Transcendentals 4th edition?
Q. does anyone know where i can find this?
Asked by Michelle C - Mon Feb 2 12:42:34 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Try either amazon or ebay. You may also find someone selling one on craigslist.
Answered by spoon737 - Mon Feb 2 12:47:37 2009

What are early transcendentals?
Q. I have a book called Calculus, early transcendentals ??? Some kind of weird formula?
Asked by qballmega - Thu Sep 3 12:41:50 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. A transcendental number is an irrational, non algebraic number. Usually complex numbers (of the form a + bi) are like this too. For example, the number "e" is transcendental because it is irrational (non-terminating, non-repeating). I wouldn't actually worry too much about them, you can use these numbers without knowing the fancy name for them and not everyone will know the name anyway.
Answered by Harmony - Thu Sep 3 12:50:09 2009

Does anyone have the answer key for Early Transcendentals James Stewart Calculus 5E?
Q. I have the key for the first 11 chapters but I'm looking for the rest so I can actaully get through some of my homework
Asked by atgrock - Tue Jul 24 22:49:58 2007 - - 1 Answers - 1 Comments

A. Hotmath.com has a page with solutions to the problems. I am not sure if they have chapter 12 on, but the link is
Answered by leo - Tue Jul 24 22:54:15 2007

Essential Calculus: Early Transcendentals International Edition?
Q. Has anyone ever purchased the international edition of this book? If so did it come in black and white and how was the paper quality? Please provide links where i can buy a good copy under 50 bucks please
Asked by Miss JJ - Tue Aug 4 21:44:33 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Generally, international editions of books will be exactly like the normal edition except that the cover is different. I believe this site will help with your purchase: There is a copy sold for $35 if you hurry now. You might also want to check the university for fliers of other students selling their used books.
Answered by Apple - Tue Aug 4 21:54:43 2009

Any one have Calculus: Early Transcendentals, 5e by James Stewart online version.?
Q. i have orde the book. but untill den i need to do my HW, and its due today. i need to do the HW. please reply A>S>A>P. thank you. if you guyz have the version on pdf, or the site link plz let me know.
Asked by urvish p - Fri Sep 7 09:37:11 2007 - - 1 Answers - 1 Comments

A. Are you taking this class through your local college? I would suggest going to the library. The campus library usually has all the textbooks that are used at the university. At my school you weren't allowed to bring the textbook out of the library. You could only check it out for 2 hours spans. If this is not an option for you, then hopefully someone else will answer and give you the pdf.
Answered by MsMath - Fri Sep 7 15:49:41 2007

Multivariable Calculus: Early Transcendentals 6th ED (By James Stewart)?
Q. Im trying to find the international edition of that book, and came across this is it what am looking for ? :p if so does anyone know the difference?
Asked by Christian - Mon Aug 3 11:15:03 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. I pretty sure that the only difference between the US and international versions is that the questions that involve units of measurement will be in ft, lb, inch etc in the US version and kg, metres etc in the international but since it's a calculus book this shouldn't be a big issue. It would be more of a problem if it was a physics or chemistry book. .,.,.,
Answered by The Wolf - Mon Aug 3 11:35:52 2009

calculus early transcendentals 5th and 6th differences?
Q. i have e5 and the teacher is assigning problems form e6 and i want to know if there is any way i can tell what is the equivalent problem number of the assigned homework in my e5
Asked by numb3rs - Mon May 12 20:42:22 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. I don't think there is. They usually change the problems at the end of chapters and sections to get their new editions sold. There might not be a real good reason for that or even the change of problems might be seen bad by some. Sorry :(
Answered by Extra Imaginative - Fri May 16 19:00:18 2008

Solution to Stewart - Calculus - Early Transcendentals 6e HQ (Thomson, 2008)?
Q. Does anyone have the solution manual for the 6e Stewart? the full one not the student, actually either one would be great! Bitorrent or anything down loadable is what I am looking for
Asked by ed - Thu Aug 14 00:46:10 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. What you are asking for is a violation of copyright law, and is against the terms of use on Yahoo! Answers. The solutions manual, like the textbook itself, is copyrighted and cannot be shared or transferred in this fashion. Check your local or school library.
Answered by cheeser1 - Sat Aug 16 19:05:51 2008

What is the difference between these two Calculus books?
Q. I was wondering if anyone could tell me the differences between Calculus: Early Transcendentals 6e and Single Variable Calculus: Early Transcendentals 6e. Thank You in advance.
Asked by quadipod1 - Wed Aug 12 20:57:32 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. The first one covers the entire calculus series (3 or 4 semesters). The second one covers only 2 semesters.
Answered by mwcritt - Wed Aug 12 21:01:16 2009

What are the differences between James Stewart's Calculus 5e and 6e?
Q. I know it will not be much, but i am looking to getting either the 5th edition or the 6th edition of his book Calculus to serve as a reference for me. Does anyone know the differences in his newest edition? Btw this is for the plain Calculus book, not the early transcendentals version.
Asked by Eric - Thu Mar 20 03:44:56 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. I have the third edition and it is fantastic. I refer to it all the tI'me. Definitely get his book, im sure either edition will be fine, cant be too many differences? You could contact the publisher to find out perhaps.
Answered by Scrander berry - Fri Mar 21 08:18:44 2008

What's the difference in Stewart's 6th Edition Calculus Early Transcendentals Book?
Q. I'm taking Math-180 at my community college. It requires me to have Stewart's 6th Edition Single Variable Early Transcendentals text. Now, I know there's a difference between that and the regular 6e Calculus book (well, amongst the physical looks - one is brown, Early Transcendentals is blue). Now, I realized that there's 3 versions of Early Transcendentals: Early Transcendentals, Single Variable E.V., and Multi Variable E.V. I have the Early Transcendentals book (it has over 1000 pages), but I don't think it is Single Variable. Is that okay? It's the 6th edition, but are the book problems/exercises different between the 3 versions?
Asked by Wong Fu Chu - Sun Jan 25 03:21:56 2009 - - 2 Answers - 1 Comments

A. Looks like there's 6 different books. You can look at the tables of contents below. The problem set will be different, especially if topics are left out or added in between versions. Might be best to check with the exact required copy. Single and multivariable calculus are two different courses.
Answered by dis_orient_ed - Tue Jan 27 18:19:38 2009

i need to download this book "Calculus - Early Transcendentals 11e - James Stewart" for free ?
Q. for free
Asked by hamedsayed89 - Wed Mar 14 17:00:32 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. being that I bought that book for like 150 dollars and that it is like 900 pages long, good luck with that try half.com and buy it cheap.
Answered by abcdefghijk - Wed Mar 14 17:27:34 2007

Can someone please post the question 8.5 #2, 4, 10, 14, 8.6#16, 48 from Rogawski Calculus late transcendentals?
Q. First good answer will get best answer
Asked by ryanyoo2009 - Fri Oct 31 13:05:55 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. I do not understand that I free you refer, but he places your exercises here: And it you solves it with procedure and without paying any cent. I hope that i serves you, bye-bye! =).
Answered by unknown - Tue Nov 4 12:19:38 2008

Does anyone have solutions to James Stewart's Calculus:Early Transcendentals 5e? Especially to chapters 14+
Q. It would really help me with my studies... thanks, if anyone has one, can you send it to my email cibyoung@yahoo.com
Asked by wanggo - Tue Feb 20 07:06:05 2007 - - 1 Answers - 5 Comments

A. I have them, just email me back and ill give you a direct link to them! ;)
Answered by DJ Solin - Wed Feb 21 19:04:28 2007

derivatives of transcendentals. help!!?
Q. y= 3x-5cos(2x)^2 please provide a step by step solution thanks!
Asked by moohaney16 - Fri Feb 27 10:11:31 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. y' = 3 + 5 sin(2x)^2 (8x) = 3 + 40x sin(2x)^2
Answered by Walid J - Fri Feb 27 10:19:12 2009

what is the next step in transcendentalism?
Q. assuming it is human nature to evolve, moving out of jungles on to land, into tribes, civilizations, religion, rules. then newton came around and everything changed with transcendentals. any predictions on the next system of thinking (not socialism btw)
Asked by andrewsoccerplayer - Sun Feb 15 01:28:56 2009 - - 5 Answers - 0 Comments

A. The next stage in transcendentalism is to reclaim our creative powers from our inventions and projections (i.e., gods). When we embrace our divinity, we'll realize no thing can limit us except ourselves. No longer will we read mythology or worship the unknown; we will be waking and walking gods.
Answered by terrestrial - Sun Feb 15 02:40:07 2009

Difference between calculus books?
Q. I know that James Stewart wrote both Calculus: Early Transcendentals and Calculus: Multi variable Calculus and I'm current taking AP Calculus BC right now, but I don't know which one is the best for taking the AP test? I have a copy of Early Transcendentals but I don't want to spend another 150$ for another textbook that wouldn't help me in the test. Do they teach the same materials generally, or I have to learn some extra thing from the internet if use the Early Transcendental one?
Asked by Silence - Sat Aug 25 01:58:53 2007 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments

A. I teach calculus AB and BC and none require multivariable calculus. That is advanced for the course. As for the book early transcentals, I have not read it so cannot say if it is a nicely written book. I love Thomas and Finney text book, which is what I use in the class and to me doing past paper questions is the best review. If you want, you can get the Calculus AP (BC) by princeton review but I find past paper practice is more than sufficient.
Answered by swd - Sat Aug 25 02:21:19 2007

What psychologist wrote these words?
Q. "No spirits, wraiths, hobgoblins, spooks, noumena, superstitions, transcendentals, mystics, invisible hands, supreme creator, angels, demons,..." Hint: It was a written on a note found next to him the day he died in 1984 at the young age of 96, and "represents his final statement of what psychology must escape to become a natural science."
Asked by FriedTofu - Sat Feb 24 15:11:50 2007 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Oh well I wanted to tell you...but you already know.
Answered by invisible1 - Sat Feb 24 15:14:49 2007

Difference between Thomas' Calculus Intl Edition and regular?
Q. What's the difference between: Thomas' Calculus, Early Transcendentals, Media Upgrade (11) and Thomas' Calculus Early Transcendentals (International Edition)... I've heard that the content in the international edition is the same as the regular one made in America but is it really true???
Asked by Christina - Mon Aug 24 23:43:27 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. The content is the same. The international edition will most likely be paperback and on low quality black and white paper.
Answered by mecdub - Thu Aug 27 13:22:10 2009

Volume using cylinder method using integration?
Q. I'm coming up with a negative volume when I'm trying to find the volume using cylinder method. The equations are: y = x^2, y = 2 - x^2 rotated around x = 1 For my circumference, i get 2pi (x -1) and for area i get 2 - x^2 - x^2 or 2 - 2x^-2 Am I doing this right? James Steward Early Transcendentals Sect: 6.2 My bad. It's section 6.3 Calculus Early Transcendentals James Steward
Asked by jacer17 - Tue Oct 6 13:38:41 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Solving y = x^2 and y = 2 - x^2, x^2 = 2 - x^2 => 2x^2 = 2 => x = -1 or 1=> x < 1 => circumference = 2 (1 - x) Volume = (x = -1 to 1) 2 (1 - x) * (2 - x^2 - x^2) dx = 2 (x = -1 to 1) (2 - 2x - 2x^2 + 2x^3) dx = 4 (x = -1 to 1) (1 - x - x^2 + x^3) dx = 4 [x - x^2/2 - x^3/3 + x^4/4] (x = -1 to 1) = 4 [ (1 - 1/2 - 1/3 + 1/4) - (-1 - 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4) ] = 4 (2 - 2/3) = 16 /3 cu. units.
Answered by Madhukar Daftary - Tue Oct 6 14:03:47 2009

From Yahoo Answer Search: 'transcendentals'
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single variable calculus: early transcendentals (hardcover)
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single variable calculus: early transcendentals (hardcover)

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Mon, 14 Sep 2009 17:51:33 GM

stewart is the author of a best-selling calculus textbook series published by cengage learning brooks/cole, including calculus, calculus: early . transcendentals​. , and calculus: concepts and contexts, as well as a series of precalculus ...

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