Explanations

Browse explanation pages that build intuition clearly and then connect the idea to notation, graphs, calculators, and formal reasoning.

ExplanationCalculus2D Graphing

What a derivative means geometrically

The derivative is the slope of the tangent line, but that phrase only becomes useful when you compare the curve to nearby secant lines and local linear approximations.

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ExplanationReal Analysis2D Graphing

What an epsilon-delta proof is actually controlling

An epsilon-delta proof is a control problem: keep close enough to a point so the function value stays inside a target band around the limit.

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ExplanationCalculus2D Graphing

Why continuity and differentiability are different concepts

Differentiability is stronger than continuity. A graph can be unbroken at a point and still fail to have a derivative there if the local shape has a corner, cusp, or vertical tangent.

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ExplanationReal AnalysisSpreadsheet Workspace

What convergence means for sequences

A sequence converges when its terms eventually stay as close as you want to a single number. The word eventually matters more than the first few terms.

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ExplanationReal AnalysisSpreadsheet Workspace

What convergence means for infinite series

An infinite series converges when its partial sums settle toward a finite number. The important object is the running total, which is why the convergent geometric series and the divergent harmonic series tell different stories even though both have terms that go to zero.

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ExplanationLinear AlgebraMath Workspace (CAS)

What eigenvectors and eigenvalues mean geometrically

An eigenvector is a direction that survives a linear transformation without rotating away from its own line. The eigenvalue tells you the scale and possible sign flip along that direction.

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ExplanationLinear AlgebraMath Workspace (CAS)

What linear independence means geometrically

Linear independence is the condition that nothing in the list is wasted. Geometrically, each new vector must add a new direction instead of repeating one you already had.

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ExplanationLinear AlgebraMath Workspace (CAS)

What a basis does in linear algebra

A basis is what turns a vector space into something you can navigate. It reaches every vector, and it does so without redundancy, so coordinates become possible.

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ExplanationStatisticsHypothesis Test Calculator

What a -value means and what it does not mean

A -value is a measure of how surprising the observed test statistic would be if the null hypothesis were true. It is not the probability that the null hypothesis itself is true.

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ExplanationCalculus2D Graphing

What a Taylor polynomial is approximating

A Taylor polynomial is not trying to copy a function everywhere. It matches the function and several of its derivatives at one chosen center, so it is designed to be locally accurate near that point.

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ExplanationCalculus2D Graphing

What the definite integral means geometrically

The definite integral measures signed area between a curve and the -axis. This page builds that idea from Riemann sums, connects it to antiderivatives, and shows how to read integral notation.

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