Best Dover Calculus Books Beyond Calc II

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Recommendations for Dover calculus books beyond the typical "Calculus II" curriculum include several notable titles. Widder's "Advanced Calculus: Second Edition" is highlighted as a classic and solid choice, appreciated for its foundational approach. Other suggested texts include Edwards' "Advanced Calculus of Several Variables," Borden's "A Course in Advanced Calculus," and Friedman's "Advanced Calculus." For those interested in differential equations, Farlow's "Partial Differential Equations for Scientists and Engineers" and Tenenbaum's "Ordinary Differential Equations" are recommended, with Tenenbaum's book noted for its practical utility and clarity, distinguishing it from other ODE texts that may prioritize aesthetics over substance. It is emphasized that a solid understanding of ordinary differential equations is essential before tackling partial differential equations.
rnabioullin
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Any recommendations on which Dover calculus books I should acquire that are past the typical "Calculus II" curriculum? Some of them appear to overlap significantly. I have considered the following books:
  • Advanced Calculus of Several Variables (Edwards)
  • Advanced Calculus: Second Edition (Widder)
  • A Course in Advanced Calculus (Borden)
  • Advanced Calculus (Friedman)
  • Technical Calculus with Analytic Geometry (Gersting)
  • ...
 
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I like the one by widder. I haven't looked at the others so they could be good too for all I know.
 
widder is a classic. old fashioned and solid. when i aspired to take honors advanced calculus from loomis he told me i needed to know things like the fact that a continuous function has a max on a closed bounded interval. i checked out widder from the library and read it there, then took the course.
 
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What about books on differential equations? I was thinking of:

  1. Partial Differential Equations for Scientists and Engineers (Farlow)
  2. Ordinary Differential Equations (Tenenbaum)
 
rnabioullin said:
What about books on differential equations? I was thinking of:

  1. Partial Differential Equations for Scientists and Engineers (Farlow)
  2. Ordinary Differential Equations (Tenenbaum)
You wouldn't need a book on PDE's till you study ODE's first.
The book by Tenenbaum is excellent, and I daresay, it's one of the only ODE texts out there that are useful(i.e. it doesn't focus on making the book attractive for professors to use or it doesn't focus on trying to impress students which really seems like what most ODE texts do).
 
This thread only works as a summary from the original source: List of STEM Masterworks in Physics, Mechanics, Electrodynamics... The original thread got very long and somewhat hard to read so I have compiled the recommendations from that thread in an online (Google Drive) spreadsheet. SUMMARY Permits are granted so you can make comments on the spreadsheet but I'll initially be the only one capable of edition. This is to avoid the possibility of someone deleting everything either by mistake...
By looking around, it seems like Dr. Hassani's books are great for studying "mathematical methods for the physicist/engineer." One is for the beginner physicist [Mathematical Methods: For Students of Physics and Related Fields] and the other is [Mathematical Physics: A Modern Introduction to Its Foundations] for the advanced undergraduate / grad student. I'm a sophomore undergrad and I have taken up the standard calculus sequence (~3sems) and ODEs. I want to self study ahead in mathematics...

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