2. Elimination with Matrices.

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  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024
  • MIT 18.06 Linear Algebra, Spring 2005
    Instructor: Gilbert Strang
    View the complete course: ocw.mit.edu/18-...
    RUclips Playlist: • MIT 18.06 Linear Algeb...
    2. Elimination with Matrices.
    License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
    More information at ocw.mit.edu/terms
    More courses at ocw.mit.edu

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @PhucLe-qs7nx
    @PhucLe-qs7nx 2 года назад +397

    00:00 Lecture overview
    02:40 Elimination Success
    10:35 Elimination Failure
    14:30 Back-substitution
    18:55 Elimination matrices
    33:00 Matrix multiplication
    37:00 Permutation matrix
    42:52 Inverse matrix

    • @atharrosyad291
      @atharrosyad291 2 года назад +10

      this comment deserves a pin tho

    • @nightlessbaron
      @nightlessbaron 2 года назад +5

      @@atharrosyad291 And voila it got one

    • @collegewifi5024
      @collegewifi5024 2 года назад

      ya i agree phuc le, that dude sucks

    • @manilrabia9385
      @manilrabia9385 2 года назад +4

      @@nightlessbaronwhy did your 'voila' sound like David of cs50

    • @MrJ691
      @MrJ691 Год назад

      I will like all your comments if you do this for every video

  • @Vidrinskas
    @Vidrinskas 3 года назад +168

    At first this guy's style seems awkward and clumsy but then 30 minutes later you realise he's sucked you in completely and totally mesmerised you. Amazing teaching.

    • @eevibessite
      @eevibessite 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/vmsROZUgsEc/видео.html

    • @user-bj5pm9pd6v
      @user-bj5pm9pd6v 2 месяца назад

      and he does it so well...

  • @tolgamulayim3176
    @tolgamulayim3176 7 лет назад +1419

    I love how the first lecture had 2+ million views and every other lecture after decreased just like in real life

    • @barszrhl445
      @barszrhl445 5 лет назад +10

      tolga boşver sen ne yaptın hepsini izledin mi ?

    • @alexc4507
      @alexc4507 5 лет назад +46

      It’s a real shame too because it’s probably just due to the shitty audio 😞 He is a god!

    • @pauljohny200
      @pauljohny200 5 лет назад +103

      @@alexc4507 Another reason is many people are not comfortable with maths ..its hard.. for many ..and then they leave..the quality of lecutre is always good ..They need the mind and desire to complete it .. might be thats not their priority

    • @NeuralxAi
      @NeuralxAi 5 лет назад +6

      hey Have You Done the Exercises Of this Course??

    • @syuann
      @syuann 4 года назад +19

      Thank you Rabbit he’s not God.
      He’s definitely one of the best in the world at this though, and his lectures are 100% worth listening to.

  • @woodknight3752
    @woodknight3752 8 лет назад +654

    After so many years of using linear algebra, until today I finally understand the meaning of matrix multiplication. matrix*vector is linear combination of the columns of the matrix, and vector*matrix is linear combination of the row of the matrix. Then from this standpoint, the meaning of permutation matrix becomes so obvious. Thank you Prof. Strang.

    • @lowgalaxy7232
      @lowgalaxy7232 6 лет назад +12

      老马,没想到在这遇到你了。

    • @slohcinana9848
      @slohcinana9848 6 лет назад +5

      Oh schnapps 😅
      Thanks lol because sometimes we need contents like these😁

    • @katadermaro
      @katadermaro 4 года назад +7

      can someone please explain this to me? I think I am missing this point and thus the permutation matrix is becoming kind of difficult for me.

    • @katadermaro
      @katadermaro 3 года назад +10

      okay, so after 3 days I actually understood the concept. Kind of cried a little bit when I did. I am so grateful to Prof Strang.

    • @katadermaro
      @katadermaro 3 года назад +26

      If anyone is confused about this part, keep watching from 20:00 to 25:00 of the video

  • @seanpitcher8957
    @seanpitcher8957 Год назад +15

    This is 100 times better than any course I could have paid for. Got his book for 50 bucks, followed along and saved myself a lot of headache and got an awesome reference. No wonder the guys at MIT are geniuses with teachers like this.

    • @rivercovey3906
      @rivercovey3906 8 месяцев назад +1

      Is the homework out of his textbook?

    • @be2112
      @be2112 3 месяца назад

      @@rivercovey3906 yes

  • @vivienne_lavida
    @vivienne_lavida 7 лет назад +882

    "Maybe I'll leave the author to prove that..."
    He is the author of the textbook they are using though! Hah!

    • @DavidFlores-re5ht
      @DavidFlores-re5ht 6 лет назад +22

      Vivienne Do i came to the comments to see if anyone noticed this also lol

    • @rkus07
      @rkus07 6 лет назад +30

      Any one serious about Linear Algebra uses Gilbert Strang. I used it in 1991 on school, sometimes still refer to it. I have also used Calculus by Strang.

    • @MayankShrivastava0
      @MayankShrivastava0 5 лет назад +3

      36:24

    • @yabinsong3484
      @yabinsong3484 5 лет назад +19

      I think what he meant was to leave it to the author of the associative law to prove that the law works.

    • @lonehermit2776
      @lonehermit2776 4 года назад +3

      @@rkus07 He has calculus??

  • @DanielCoutoF
    @DanielCoutoF 9 лет назад +593

    This is not a lecture, this is art.

    • @NeuralxAi
      @NeuralxAi 5 лет назад +5

      hey Have You Done the Exercises Of this Course??

    • @pushkarpandey9917
      @pushkarpandey9917 4 года назад +51

      This comment was discussed in his recent interview...😃😄

    • @luxtenebris764
      @luxtenebris764 4 года назад +4

      I saw your comment randomly, than wathan went to vid 0 interview, skip some seconds, the interviewer said your comment , zhit life is so tiny

    • @MasterCivilEngineering
      @MasterCivilEngineering 3 года назад +1

      Watch more art here

    • @DanielCoutoF
      @DanielCoutoF 3 года назад +25

      Ty guys for telling me, the funny thing is i think i already saw this interview and didn't even realize they were talking about my comment, 5 years is a long time i guess.

  • @anandsaha01
    @anandsaha01 7 лет назад +743

    1:42 "The idea of elimination ... I mean you would have thought of it .. Gauss thought of it before we did only because he was born earlier which is natural idea .. ahh .. died earlier too" ... ROFL! This prof has a geeky sense of humor ...

    • @sreeharipillai9163
      @sreeharipillai9163 5 лет назад +17

      Such a humor ... died earlier too :)

    • @bisheshbohora9394
      @bisheshbohora9394 4 года назад +4

      thug life..😎😎

    • @ionbobia
      @ionbobia 3 года назад +4

      Someone in the audience added a comment and the teacher, interrupting the idea being expressed, confirmed "...and died earlier too..." No intention for humor here!

    • @hovhannisyanani
      @hovhannisyanani 3 года назад +1

      @@ionbobia it is intention for humor, because he didn't skip the audience comments... this is called "perfect teaching skills"...

  • @osmanjant
    @osmanjant 9 лет назад +209

    I like this professor so much, listening his course is an amusement.

    • @JoffreyB
      @JoffreyB 6 лет назад +2

      do you mean he is playing clown role for your entertaining pastime?

    • @VictorRodriguez-zp2do
      @VictorRodriguez-zp2do 5 лет назад +6

      He's not that good at explaining in my opinion, I had to go and search for everything in this video on internet to actually understand what he was talking about, if I only had this video to learn I would have to struggle a lot in order to understand the lecture.

    • @-steady-8215
      @-steady-8215 2 года назад +7

      @@VictorRodriguez-zp2do people have different mathematical maturity. It's not possible for every course to dumb it down for people like you and me. Not saying they don't start from the ground principles, it's just that they don't spend as much time there as we might need. I learnt some linear algebra in high school so I am able to follow this course by pausing in between. But if this would have been my first introduction to linear algebra, I would have sat there scratching my head and blaming professor strang to be a terrible teacher.

    • @mithatcancamur2819
      @mithatcancamur2819 2 года назад

      @@JoffreyB u mad?

    • @Jack-lg9mq
      @Jack-lg9mq 2 года назад +2

      @@VictorRodriguez-zp2do I found these videos great, however, I already have a degree in Maths and used this as a refresher. I would agree that he probably doesn't do a very good job at explaining new concepts so don't be disheartened if you need to read other material - I would have too.

  • @shawnwilliams77
    @shawnwilliams77 12 лет назад +54

    He teaches the way mathematicians do math, lol. It comes to him as he goes along. Such a natural teacher. How I wish I had him...

  • @solomonxie5157
    @solomonxie5157 6 лет назад +257

    Lecture video timeline Links
    Lecture 0:0
    Elimination pivots and an example 3:9
    Failure of Elimination method 10:34
    Augmented matrix 14:50
    Operations of matrices elimination 19:24
    Row operations of Matrices Multiplication 20:22
    Column operations of Matrices multiplication 21:43
    Elementary Matrix 24:46
    Include all elimination steps in one Matrix 33:29

    • @aashudwivedi
      @aashudwivedi 4 года назад +6

      I look for your comment in each lecture. You are the hero we need :)

    • @Happyflower131
      @Happyflower131 4 года назад +3

      Thank you sm

    • @neerajbhatt700
      @neerajbhatt700 3 года назад +1

      Thank my man

    • @zappist751
      @zappist751 2 года назад +1

      congrats on marriage lol

  • @Hataldir
    @Hataldir 5 лет назад +11

    5 years of physics+4 years of phd in astrophysics and this man managed to give me a much clearer picture of algebra operations than what I got from all my professors.
    Thank you so much for these lectures Proff. Strang!

  • @LAnonHubbard
    @LAnonHubbard 12 лет назад +54

    I've studied linear algebra from another online source, and that's given me a great foundation, but this lecture has really helped me to SEE the matrix multiplication from a higher level. Before this video, I hadn't considered that the left multiplication can be thought of as applying row operations.

  • @Wahrscheinlichkeit
    @Wahrscheinlichkeit 10 лет назад +93

    Dr. Gilbert Strang is a truly great professor

  • @xiaohanwang3885
    @xiaohanwang3885 8 лет назад +36

    "@35:53 Forget the word 'associative', but don't forget the law". Love this.

    • @ChuckEarnest
      @ChuckEarnest 7 лет назад +1

      That was the point I knew I had come to the right place to learn this.

  • @ekdud2772
    @ekdud2772 2 года назад +9

    there's something about his lectures that make it so easy for me to concentrate and follow along. I think it's because he thinks out loud; verbalizing the literal thought processes he runs through to compute this stuff, like he himself is learning for the first time and trying to understand what's going on. even though he's on a higher level than all of us mathematically, he still retains such a clear understanding of the basics.

  • @lee_land_y69
    @lee_land_y69 6 лет назад +16

    Brilliant. He needs to be recorded. His every sentence clarifies some linear algebra confusion that I had. Even though I have done this corse in my university, I still find it useful to watch his lectures. Even the most introductory ones, like this. Truly amazing job.

  • @SirNeshorn
    @SirNeshorn 8 лет назад +163

    "oh, did I just invent a negative one?" - made me laugh =)
    Love these lectures, very well explained and at a comfortable pace. Thank you for this.

    • @kathyhalton8352
      @kathyhalton8352 6 лет назад

      You should see the 2blue1brown ones :)

    • @tcveatch
      @tcveatch 3 года назад +2

      I’m pretty sure he did that on purpose to test people’s paying attention or not. If you didn’t notice until the audience said something, you weren’t paying attention. It’s a suggestion to pay closer attention, expressed subtly..

    • @diegoferrari3341
      @diegoferrari3341 Год назад

      @@tcveatch and about the 5? -2 times 2 minus 1 wouldn,t be -5?

    • @pseudolullus
      @pseudolullus Год назад

      ​@@diegoferrari3341 1-(-4), bro

    • @physicsisawesome696
      @physicsisawesome696 10 месяцев назад

      I was quite proud when I actually noted down -2 instead of -1 and then he corrected himself. Ngl

  • @antoniomilici7682
    @antoniomilici7682 9 лет назад +55

    When I was young I studied these topics at high school and again at the first year of the degree in physics 16 years ago. Now I’m rather surprised in be interested and in spending time to watch these valuable lectures on linear algebra, above all because I have nothing to do with them in my current life. But concepts are here so clearly explained that they turn me on the pleasure to remember how I was, that time puzzled, and how you can catch up comprehension of things after so many years.

  • @DracoRenaissance
    @DracoRenaissance 13 лет назад +19

    if this professor's class would be a column vector, it will definitely be linearly independent of all other linear algebra classes. He squeezes in new and interesting stuff that is not in the other vectors

  • @akashrajput6536
    @akashrajput6536 2 года назад +6

    He is not just the great teacher, but also the great artist. He just teaches these things seamlessly, and this is an art.

  • @Erebus2075
    @Erebus2075 8 лет назад +37

    love how many small extra's he throws in constantly, as small "notes" to know ^^ keeps the mind awake and entertained in wonder :D
    wish my professors was as invested in their lectures :)

  • @hyzy96
    @hyzy96 9 лет назад +11

    This guy is amazing...When teachers taught this in my college everything went right off the top of my hat...

  • @RishiSharma2
    @RishiSharma2 7 лет назад +5

    The way he is teaching linear algebra by taking example of solving linear equations and not just throwing all the formulas without their incentive is really great.

  • @DharambirPoddar
    @DharambirPoddar 3 года назад +12

    This kind of lecture is only possible when your deep passion for your work! Huge Thanks, Sir Strang!

  • @ilyakravchuk7290
    @ilyakravchuk7290 21 день назад

    "Informally we've got by columns by rows by each entry at a time". Such an eye opener. Would've been a real salvation back then if any of my blind lecturers had told me that so I wouldn't have been left in the wilderness with "take each row and multiply by each column, this is how it works"
    What I miss at the end of each and every lecture is a storm of applause. What a grate man. I wish I'd had a lecturer like him 10 years ago when I was a student. Although have got a whole lot of gratitude for that we meet anyway. It's never too late.
    So thankful to you Prof. Strang, so thankful.

  • @superslash946
    @superslash946 9 лет назад +11

    First video series ive watched without getting bored (as for educative videos), this teacher rocks, all hail Mr. old genius guy. Perfectly understandable, my respect to him.

  • @GREAT-yu4hh
    @GREAT-yu4hh 3 года назад +2

    I'm japanese and an university student. I already learned this kind of things but this proffessor is awsome !
    I do hope he is still alive.

  • @oltasat
    @oltasat 6 лет назад +3

    Am here as a Graduate student who is up for a Behavioral economics interview in two weeks and i need some Econometric analysis background led me here as a foundation and am not even mad.. the Professor is just amazing.

  • @Alperakay2008
    @Alperakay2008 3 месяца назад +2

    thank you very very much professor Gilbert Strang I'm watching these from Turkey 🇹🇷 ❤

  • @roninkegawa1804
    @roninkegawa1804 2 года назад +4

    When you combine those lectures with the ones from 3 Blue 1Brown you get a superb class that opens the doors to mastery. Tank you. I am teching myself math just for the fun of it thanks to You Tube!

  • @joshuafancher3111
    @joshuafancher3111 5 лет назад +2

    Row operations multiply on the left, Column operations multiply on the right. 41:00 - perfect clarification

  • @templar19
    @templar19 12 лет назад +8

    Seeing the concepts of linear algebra intertwined like this is quite amazing! I have tremendous respect for this prof for taking the time to not only prepare these lectures but to put them together into a brilliantly clear and intuitively appealing mathematical tour-de-force.

  • @francisovenden6993
    @francisovenden6993 3 года назад +2

    He's got such a lovely piece-by-piece, jigsaw-building lecturing style, as if he is rediscovering and rebuilding the knowledge in front of us

  • @user-gd3uw3dx5p
    @user-gd3uw3dx5p 10 лет назад +14

    it's like i can hear him when i study his book... He is just excelent...

  • @spacecapitalism7152
    @spacecapitalism7152 6 лет назад +2

    It is so beautiful when you finally understand and can figure out those e matrices quickly and put it together into one transformation matrix.

  • @ceidass
    @ceidass 8 лет назад +1713

    44:16 When you see your ex again

    • @robby1992
      @robby1992 8 лет назад +42

      you are genius

    • @2012vsk
      @2012vsk 7 лет назад +3

      whats the exact time stamp?? could not get it

    • @ceidass
      @ceidass 7 лет назад +13

      Its the motion, he sees it, goes like "Bliah" and hides it again :)

    • @aryensujjan
      @aryensujjan 7 лет назад +2

      awesome observation

    • @radwizard
      @radwizard 7 лет назад +4

      hahahah I see what you did there ;)

  • @OsvaldoCarro
    @OsvaldoCarro Год назад +1

    I like how he deliberately pauses for a second when contemplating a question, not because he is thinking about the answer, but because he wants you to think for yourself for that brief moment before he continues. Brilliant.

  • @michalchik
    @michalchik 8 лет назад +8

    This guy is a beautiful example of how much value is added to a simple lecture, when teh lecturer knows his subject deeply and apprecaite what it is going to be used for at higher levels. He is doing an excellent job conveying the basics while teaching the students how he thinks. This is going to drive the students that just want to know how to solve the problem nuts, and be a boon in the long run for the really bright and intuitively deep students. I have never seen matrices taught with such love. I say this as a teacher that teaches basic matrix math.

  • @user-ji6ki8jy8l
    @user-ji6ki8jy8l 2 года назад +1

    您是我见过的最好的老师,祝您身体健康
    You are the best teacher I have ever met. I wish you good health

  • @ramenmachinegun
    @ramenmachinegun 6 лет назад +4

    Glad to see these lectures. It would have been an honour being taught by this professor! A lot of things are making sense today, that didnt make sense when I took college a decade ago.

  • @arbdistress5592
    @arbdistress5592 4 года назад +1

    Having a great teacher is so important! I have known all these operations for over 20 years, but really until now I know what it truly means by matrix multiplication! All my previous teacher just shown me the operations but never explained what it is trying to do.

  • @AmanuelGeda
    @AmanuelGeda 10 лет назад +3

    I love Prof. Gilbert's lecture videos on Linear Algebra. I read his books and watched his videos five years back, but I enjoy it watching him again.

  • @victorserras
    @victorserras 6 лет назад +1

    I have so much respect for professor Gilbert Strang. He's at such an advanced age in these videos yet he can still give such great lectures. In fact it's 2018 and he still is giving lectures!

  • @thomaselder4076
    @thomaselder4076 8 лет назад +9

    This instructor is wonderful.

  • @MethenySco
    @MethenySco 3 месяца назад

    I've never seen math explained so clearly, and so engagingly...He almost held me in suspense waiting for the next step....Brilliant.

  • @viq234
    @viq234 4 года назад +9

    OMG I studied this at uni, but I haven't used maths in a long time. I was trying to figure out how he got a 5. Took me 10 minutes to work out that 1 - - 4 = 5

  • @pultural
    @pultural 3 года назад +2

    31:53 - my first "ahaaaaa" moment...so excited to move forward with this course, just brilliant!

  • @marinabaskakova2333
    @marinabaskakova2333 3 года назад +3

    Such an amazing professor, he turns math into a fascinating story!
    If most teachers at MIT are even 70% that good, that explains how students there get so smart haha

    • @alfredomulleretxeberria4239
      @alfredomulleretxeberria4239 Год назад

      They have to be smart and highly disciplined in order to even get in. The difficult part at MIT isn't understanding course material. It's doing homework assignments, tests, projects, and participating in mandatory extracurricular athletics programs.

  • @Os_Bosniak
    @Os_Bosniak 4 года назад +1


    Aside from what Professor Strang teaches great, he also has a refined sense of humor. Gauss discovered before us, not only because he lived before us, but also died before us. Well, then, because of the "mistake" in the third row and the second column, when he "promised" A to one of the students at the exam.

  • @Ehbraham
    @Ehbraham 9 лет назад +4

    I'm too dumb for MIT, but his lectures are so much simpler and easy to understand than my professor's. #SJSU

  • @HankC9174
    @HankC9174 3 года назад

    i appreciate how leaders in their field can teach the simple parts with enthusiasm

  • @easycooking9882
    @easycooking9882 10 лет назад +67

    I think it would be better for someone who already have linear algebra background. I learned something from another perspective. The meaning behind it.
    For new learners, it is still hard.

    • @black_squall
      @black_squall 9 лет назад +15

      Yeah i find him really interesting to listen to but if this were a beginning lesson I would be scratching my head

    • @spirit-ph1no
      @spirit-ph1no 9 лет назад +2

      curtsher11 Then this would not be a good lecture at all. A class is suppose to be taken from a perspective that you are starting to learn. I just started this lecture and I am still unsure if I should continue watching it.

    • @black_squall
      @black_squall 9 лет назад +2

      *****
      I'd find something more basic. No sense in stretching your mind on the first class.

    • @spirit-ph1no
      @spirit-ph1no 9 лет назад +4

      +curtsher11 Thats the problem. There are key elements in matrix multiplication that he did not covered. I already learned what they are but if your missing a building block, then you cant study ahead.

    • @alina_dial
      @alina_dial 9 лет назад +4

      +EasyCooking yea ,absolutely ,its not for new learners ,its for the one who really wants to know how all things works ,, and why we should learn them and what is the best way to solve the problems, i do suggest everyone to learn linear algebra once .

  • @user-fh1do9xb4n
    @user-fh1do9xb4n 2 года назад

    God bless you, Dr Strang! I've struggled with matrices and matrices operation since more than a year, and thanks to you I've finally had the 'Aha!' moment.

  • @deepuraveendran1903
    @deepuraveendran1903 9 лет назад +3

    This is the best lecture for Linear Algebra.

  • @dlwldn915
    @dlwldn915 13 лет назад +1

    Man, this guy is soo much better than my own prof.. It's just that he's able to explain ideas much more clearly and at a reasonable pace!

  • @cjhhong
    @cjhhong 10 лет назад +8

    It is a honor watching this. Thanks

  • @davidewing9088
    @davidewing9088 3 года назад +1

    I love the way this instructor presents this subject!

  • @acco5038
    @acco5038 5 лет назад +4

    I don’t need to take linear algebra in college but it’s 3 am and here I am 1 full lecture deep too late to stop now

  • @kebedetadesse8
    @kebedetadesse8 3 года назад +1

    The father of "Maths..." I like all your lectures very much!!

  • @jeffreychan9049
    @jeffreychan9049 9 лет назад +104

    how many chalkboards are in that classroom? lol

  • @MChanakya
    @MChanakya 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you, MIT OpenCourseWare and Prof Gilbert Strang. I had never thought of basics of matrices in this more clearer fashion.

  • @NessaRojas
    @NessaRojas 9 лет назад +4

    I'm liking these videos a lot, but I admit that if this was my first introduction to Linear Algebra, I would be confused. I have already had a LA course before, and these videos are just great for me to think about things differently and connect the concepts in different ways. Have had a few "aha!" moments with things I only did mechanically before.

    • @lee_land_y69
      @lee_land_y69 6 лет назад +1

      That’s why reading material is so important for newbies. Most of MIT lectures are difficult without proper prior reading.

  • @bobross6228
    @bobross6228 7 месяцев назад

    For those watching, I would say go watch the first half the next lecture for matrix multiplication first if you aren’t solid in it. It’ll help get you a bit of a better understanding when he starts expressing elimination steps as matrix multiplication and combinations of rows of B.

  • @ivanreii
    @ivanreii 7 лет назад +65

    "He was born earlier.. it was natural idea.. and died earlier too" xD

    • @ionbobia
      @ionbobia 3 года назад

      Someone in the audience added a comment and the teacher, interrupting the idea being expressed, confirmed "...and died earlier too..." No intention for humor here!

  • @TheMozarka
    @TheMozarka 14 лет назад

    Yes, he is correct. Since the multiplier for row 2 is 2, you need to multiply what's in the (2,3) position by 2 and subtract it from what's in the (3,3) position.1 - 2(-2) = 1 + 4 = 5. Hope this helps!

  • @TheAInfinity
    @TheAInfinity 10 лет назад +44

    853,620 quit already.

  • @BigBen866
    @BigBen866 2 года назад +1

    The benefits of learning from the person who wrote textbooks on the subject 🤔😀Awesome!!!!!!! He’s math lab-Awesome again😀😀😀 Where was this guy when I was taking Pre-Calculus 1 and 2!!!

  • @snowpunk116
    @snowpunk116 10 лет назад +45

    'gauss given order' lol

    • @snowpunk116
      @snowpunk116 10 лет назад

      s29.postimg.org/gygdrho4z/Screen_Shot_2014_02_20_at_3_17_54_PM.jpg?noCache=1392929043

  • @tndoan
    @tndoan 15 лет назад +3

    It's such an amazing video. He made me know the real meaning of matrices, not just use it to compute

  • @thomasyang8983
    @thomasyang8983 7 лет назад

    the best professor on linear algebra and free class, you don't pay anything you get the best educated in the world, god bless America and the bad professors in the university should've think about themselves too, if they don't really like teaching and love students want to help students to make sense,they can always just leave, we have a lot of good professors looking for jobs!!!

  • @DavidBulczak
    @DavidBulczak 10 лет назад +4

    I love this lectures. I refresh my math knowledge with them. Thank you!

  • @Vgzgz
    @Vgzgz 8 лет назад +1

    What a great lecturer! Everything is explaind so detailed, preciselly and clear. Now i understand why education in UK is US$12k and in US is US$60k. It is 5 times better then I achived in a 12 weak course in my Uni
    Thank you!

    • @ToastingInEpicBread
      @ToastingInEpicBread 8 лет назад +5

      +Иван Гулиев and now it is free on the internet...

    • @dimi333
      @dimi333 8 лет назад

      +Иван Гулиев У нас в МГУ на Экфаке и то хуже объясняют)

  • @ayushsingh562
    @ayushsingh562 6 лет назад +4

    I never Get bored watching these lectures.Prof.Gilbert Strang is awesome!!
    Thank you Sir :))

  • @dalisabe62
    @dalisabe62 3 года назад +1

    Using the definition of matrix multiplication to come up with a matrix that performs the elimination process is indeed a fascinating idea.

  • @Muslim604c
    @Muslim604c 10 лет назад +43

    900,000 people did not like the change in sound quality.

    • @NeuralxAi
      @NeuralxAi 5 лет назад +1

      hey Have You Done the Exercises Of this Course??

  • @ManicReactions
    @ManicReactions 2 года назад

    The fascinating part is I took this course 30 years ago and it’s all flooding back.

  • @sadianaputra9794
    @sadianaputra9794 10 лет назад +3

    he is the best professor i know

  • @olgashatunova2385
    @olgashatunova2385 4 года назад +1

    The key ideas all in one lecture! Bravo Dr. Gilbert Strang! Love your presentation!

  • @abhishekshah11
    @abhishekshah11 4 года назад +4

    My teacher's should've taught me this 10 years ago. Imagine where would I be if I knew this way of thinking back then :/

  • @justamortalman
    @justamortalman 4 года назад +1

    Understanding the meaning of legendary in these series of videos

  • @digitizerSF
    @digitizerSF 11 лет назад +43

    I just caught that: "Keep them in their Gauss-given order" (instead of God-given...hahaha)

  • @theroohith
    @theroohith 2 года назад +1

    40:49 That's wonderful way of saying it

  • @Newbport849
    @Newbport849 8 лет назад +25

    26:33 DENIEEEEDDD.

  • @mdhasnain_3764
    @mdhasnain_3764 Месяц назад

    Hands down, this still beats all the other online udemy, coursera courses.

  • @Vmt16
    @Vmt16 10 лет назад +3

    I have absolutely no idea what he's talking about (I just simply suck at math + I'm not that advanced) but the way he teaches it makes me curious about it and also wish I knew how to do math like that.

    • @IllIlIIllIlIl
      @IllIlIIllIlIl 9 лет назад +1

      Watch lecture one if you havent. If you want to be good at math, you can be, but you need to work hard :)

    • @Vmt16
      @Vmt16 9 лет назад +1

      ***** I'm gonna try that sometime, would really be a useful skill.

    • @Peter_1986
      @Peter_1986 9 лет назад

      Vmt16 If you are unfamiliar with math then I highly recommend KhanAcademy - that site has countless math videos and the site is extremely easy to use.
      You don't need to be a member or anything, you can just enter the site, then choose "Subjects" at the top of the page and go to "Math" and then just start watching the videos and practicing the example problems - and it's even 100% free!
      It's a perfect educational site in every possible way you can think of, and the creator of the site, Salman Khan, is also very likeable and relaxed and has a great sense of humour as well.
      Here is a direct link to the site:
      www.khanacademy.org/

    • @Vmt16
      @Vmt16 9 лет назад

      Laurelindo I'll try that later, thanks for the tip!

    • @lwskiner
      @lwskiner 9 лет назад

      Vmt16 This lecture is a mess, it follows no logical path in its explanation of reduction methods, mostly random thoughts . Go to Khan Academy for this portion for clarity and the whys.

  • @John-lf3xf
    @John-lf3xf 5 лет назад +1

    Upto 19:00 Row operation elimination and back substituton(row eschelon form)

  • @fireblizzard2287
    @fireblizzard2287 3 года назад +3

    Thank you so much sir, for uploading this playlist on Linear Algebra. I need those concepts for Quantum Mechanics classes.

  • @ninadgandhi9040
    @ninadgandhi9040 2 года назад

    Love it when prof. Strang says "OKhay". Gives me a strange sense of satisfaction!

  • @iamjessehamad
    @iamjessehamad 8 лет назад +11

    when the love child of mr rogers and bill nye decides to teach algebra

  • @princeardalan
    @princeardalan 2 года назад

    This is one of the most beautiful lectures on Gaussian elimination.

  • @rudrajyotidas1538
    @rudrajyotidas1538 3 года назад +4

    The way he arrived at the Identity Matrix.. So ingenius !!
    Never thought of it that way
    Edit: And he explained inverses BEAUTIFULLY !!

  • @PouyaKary
    @PouyaKary 6 лет назад

    Almost anyone in the comments are those who needed to learn linear algebra but couldn't because of all the horrible lectures out there and then they found this one. What a lovely wonderful course. I'm not even tired a bit. My first ever comment on a youtube video I guess so: Thanks a lot for the amazing lectures.

  • @TheGoldenriff
    @TheGoldenriff 9 лет назад +3

    Its professor from futurama irl! Haha strang is a living legend.

  • @theasheng8917
    @theasheng8917 Год назад

    How I wish I could join the laughter in class when prof shows his sense of humor while lecturing

  • @alimemon7611
    @alimemon7611 10 лет назад +18

    No. It should be 5 since we are subtracting row 2 FROM row 3. So i.e 1-(-4) = 5

    • @acho8387
      @acho8387 10 лет назад +5

      oh... you're THAT guy..

    • @ivan-nm1xn
      @ivan-nm1xn 10 лет назад +5

      Thanks! I was wondering about that.

    • @AhmedKhashabaa
      @AhmedKhashabaa 10 лет назад +4

      Its (row 3) - 2 (row 2)
      1 - 2 ( -2 ) = 5

    • @jacobramirez5508
      @jacobramirez5508 9 лет назад +2

      Ok now this is where Im getting cought up on... Its 2x row 2 so you can cancel out the third row because you are subtracting row 3 from row 2... so
      2(0 2 -2)
      - (0 4 1)
      (0 4 -4)
      -(0 4 1)
      =(0 0 -5)
      so in turn wouldn't matrix U be
      (1 2 1)
      (0 2 -2)
      (0 0 -5)

    • @MrSupernova111
      @MrSupernova111 9 лет назад +1

      Shahan Memon Thanks!

  • @euclid9492
    @euclid9492 2 года назад

    This is night and day to my professor. So much simple insight I didn't glean like the simple fact: to swap columns, put the elementary matrix on the right. Wow. I didn't get this until now, I would always try to transpose in a roundabout way.

  • @zkhandwala
    @zkhandwala 14 лет назад +3

    I find it interesting that there were ~278,000 views of the first lecture, but only ~90,000 views of this one... I wonder if MIT has that sort of drop-out rate ;-).

  • @danarmond8891
    @danarmond8891 8 лет назад

    This professor is an artist and I can't understand why some people disliked this video. Thank you from Brazil :)

    • @sunilmanandhar1181
      @sunilmanandhar1181 8 лет назад +2

      They were watching the lecture with the laptop upside down.

    • @lucasm4299
      @lucasm4299 7 лет назад

      Dan Armond
      They might have disliked it because MIT is an American school.

  • @doubleja
    @doubleja 15 лет назад +8

    "AHHH, sorry he's still there"
    ^.^