i just dont know why but as a student who hardly understands anything about math, i kinda like watching other people show off complicated craps about it. it's just fun to watch something you cant acknowledge
I love it. Of course, it all takes up a lot of space and may not be needed in the future, many years later I still refuse to throw away all my notes, which were then given to me with difficulty because of my indiscipline. But it's not just the space or the difficulty; what matters most to me about these mathematical notes is how vividly I experienced pleasurable emotions and how strongly and deeply I gave myself to my curiosity about mathematics. I have more than a dozen scribbled A5 notebooks with thick sheets on which I wrote with a fountain pen. After a long time, it pleases and delights me to be able to leaf through these old sheets with formulas. Pleasant memories.
The most fun thing in math for me was deriving equations for anything. I remember deriving the drag equation (velocity as a function of time WITH drag) as a sophomore in highschool. Took 3 pages back and front to get it. Even cleaning the process up afterwards to write down how I got it still took a full front and back paper. So satisfying to look through my old papers though. You get into a state when deriving the equations where it stops looking like an equation and is instead more like a language and it kind of becomes a game or puzzle to solve certain parts of it. Its like you become very fluent in the math. You can just change and manipulate the equation however you want without having to deeply think about the properties and rules of algebra you are using when trying to do a specific thing.
That’s like how I refuse to use electronics for notes. I just can’t. Something about physically writing on paper with my favorite pens and mechanical pencils. Also I think I learn it better on paper for some reason.
what kind of beast you must be to enjoy seeing math formulas, to me they look like nightmares brought into life. I kinda understand your experience too, as i go through the same with arts and chemistry.
Very few people can understand the satisfaction that's derived from drawing - by hand - a small square at the end of your proof to indicate that you're done. This is one of the joys I recall from studying pure math in college and grad school (till I had to stop due to extensive work travels).
Keep on going brother! When I see such students who're hard workers and put effort in their studies, it genuinely gives me kind of a re-assurance to keep striving. Best of luck! Way to go
Thank you for sharing your notes collection!! I'm a junior pure math student, and I'm still trying to learn the different approaches math students take to studying the content. Seeing that your notes look pretty similar to mine-- sometimes with proofs and examples, sometimes without lol-- has reassured me that I might be on the right track. I'd love to see a video about your daily schedule/time management strats while you were/are studying for classes, if you ever feel inspired to make one
when it comes to learning, then you should have a look at the sm-2 algorithm. i can learn so much faster with that algorithm. i am down from 8h of daily studying to 2-3h.
good luck on your future pure math learnings, presonally i found that working with a checklist(i use microsoft's 1 becuase of the sound it makes when you complete things) is quite efficient for me, but when it comes to learning its hard to make yourself tasks or time goals, so i just give myself a checklist of subjects im sufficient/insufficient in and then slowly learn untill i feel acomplished in those things, in addition doing a 6:1 ratio between studing and then taking a break like pomodore is really nice for learning. goodluck and gooday
4th year comp sci engg student here, although much of our stuff is done on the computer itself, I still like to make notes while studying different concepts it makes the stuff easy to understand and the night before exam you can just look at the notes. Notes taking is a wonderful thing and if someone can be as organized in note taking process as you are they will get success! Nice video mate enjoyed it!! All the best!
I love taking notes while reading. I have a hard time comprehending things while reading/hearing (actually less so for maths, but very much so when reading "regular" books - perhaps mild dyslexia?) so I take notes for basically every sentence to help me understand. Problem is that these notes are basically unreadable and unapt for studying later haha. Very impressive how clean yours look!
While it is time inefficient, I have found that this sort of detailed note taking has yielded the best results for my understanding and problem solving ability
I think complex analysis, variation limits, measurement, fractals, fourier analysis, convolutions, I think are particularly cool stuff. I’m working with radiometric mapping, infrared camera control, infrared image acquisition, infrared image correction, and hyperspectral imaging tasks. Being involved with the experiments, camera configuration selection and optimization, radiometric source calculations, signal propagation from source to and through the camera, the image processing, and the imaging task performance optimizations provide a very cool system for doing projects that tap into a lot of the different math topics that you were discussing you have covered in your notes. You can expect the references to be sparse, but they will show up throughout all levels of the system and probably in most piles of your notes. Highly suggested trying it out as a side project for experience with applied mathematics.
Damn, here I was proud of my 130 pages of notes from a 1 year course in introduction to Advanced Engineering math... Pure math students really are on a whole other level
Inspirational video. You seem well organized and put together. Ive a senior undegrad studying cs but ive dreamed of continuing to study textbooks on math physics and philosophy into the future when Im working
The cauchy residue theorem alongside jordan’s lemma are one of the best tools made to solve the most complex integrals.. complex analysis is underappreciated
Personally I like taking notes of subjects that are hard to understand or remember -- I don't have algebra 1 notes, for example -- and I prefer to type them in an editor that allows for snippets. I found some and I can now type LaTeX pretty close to how I write or faster for some textbooks. I can't do images quickly but most of the math I consume doesn't rely on images a lot. Having my notes in a digital space also saves physical space, allows me to edit them, check for typos, carry them almost everywhere, and I can share them with others more easily. If I was a slow typer or restricted to pen and paper, I'd take way fewer notes
@@PXO005 I meant HS algebra 1, sorry. There I learned about solving linear equations, systems of linear equations (though without mentioning linear algebra), slopes of lines, factoring polynomials, and other basic things. I do these things any time I have a calculus or probability problem so it's not worth it to take notes on, e.g., how to expand (x + 3)(x - 7)
Wow I'm genuinely impressed 👏 I'm a freshman in med school and I struggle with note taking maybe one day I will be as good as you but first I must fix my hand writing because it's not readable I think maybe you can share these notes with the people who need it by scanning them . Best of luck
Bro same...i actually use 3 colors for my notes so that when i read it through i gets eye appealing...and for each topic i have a 2 notebooks one for lecture notes and one for taking notes from the book... simultaneously if i read any papers notes for that too...my bed and the table is just filled with all notebooks and books
first read for a couple of days and spend writing from memory all you read maybe? I have been trying to do this lately as I study Folland's analysis and Lee's topological manifolds
I do the same thing, I don't think it's bad, I don't literally note take *everything* but just theorems with proofs & definitions, I think I benefit because you know the theorem better putting it down in writing and also the notes are a better referrence than the book because it's straight to the point, as long as your actively trying to engange with the material instead of just mindlessly copying it down your fine.
Different approaches work for different people. I am soon to graduate and took really, really bad notes. IMO you don't have to memorize every detail, as long as you can solve a problem, in principle, by knowing what to look up if the situation arises. If you don't believe in platonism, the details are everything, but if you believe in platonism, the details are a matter of course after a good enough understanding.
Skip as many steps as you can so when you re-read your notes you'll have to figure some of the steps on your own.I find that if every step is written out in detail you never use your brain when reading your notes and just sort of skim over them. If you can remember entire proofs just write down the result in your notes and when you are reading them try proving the whole thing
I am very impressed how there appears to be little to no mistakes or scribbles in the notes. This is something I am not capable of. I simply make a lot of mistakes even in my own writing. Not sure it if relates to lack of focus. Anyway...thanks for sharing!
I am doing PhD in engineering and I also started out like this. First I had too many registers. Then I switched to blank sheets, but both of them were too hard to manage and I had to many times refer to my notes for looking up old derivations and formulations I had done a year ago and so on. I finally bought a tablet and use to solely take notes and read papers. Never has a gadget been so useful to me before.
If you have a geometry background, I recommend the books by Schlag or Narasimhan although they are a bit advanced. There are also some pretty visual books on complex analysis, such as Wegert's Visual Complex Functions, which uses a visualization technique called phase portraits, or the popular Needham book. I've also heard good things about the German books by Remmert (two GTM volumes) and Freitag (two universitext volumes).
How much time did you spend on average for each tablet of notes? I imagine it varies on topic and personal interest. They look to bw written in ink--impressive.
What is your goal to accomplish with those notes? Information retention? Do you usually read a couple of pages and then try to recall the structure of the proofs and condense them or do you copy it straight away line for line or add your own thoughts to these notes? I'm asking because when I read books I usually annotate and highlight rather than take notes on them. Great work 👍
Hey! Keep those piles through your life, they will be like time travel machines for you some day 😊 is there any reason why you wrote only in one side of the paper? I for example love the comfort of having everything in one side so I don’t have to be turning pages all the time, so I use recycled copies that have one side in blank, but I’d feel kinda bad having left paper sides empty 😅
Thank you, I think I wrote single side because it makes the notes a little more readable and I knew that would be put to good use in the future by someone if not me.
1. Can you make a fortune from your notes? Certainly, but how readable it is to others? You said you skipped some chapters, perhaps others might look for chapters you skipped. Perhaps you can digitized them and add to it. 2. Do you use LaTEX or math softwares or writing tools? 3. Is it waste of time? From how you managed to review it and explain it to us, the notes have been really useful to you, and you said therapeutic more than once, so it must be beneficial for you. 4. I assume this is reading notes, since you associate each notes with a book, and I saw you only make few mistakes. I wonder how do you take notes for classes? Keep up the good work, man. 😉
Have you ever considered writing notes on an ipad or something digital? It seems troublesome having so much important work in bulky stacks like that. Idk just my opinion cuz i keep all my notes in my ipad but have missed writing with pen and paper. Im just afraid that it would get ruined or that it would be hard to carry around
Not sure about him, but I personally enjoy taking notes on paper despite having access to digital stuff because it just feels like I can have a much more intimate connection to the notes. I know the subtle nuances of each page and I can flip to pages I need much quicker than swiping to a specific page in a media device. Some sections of the notes may have rougher or smoother paper, which can help to serve as guides and bookmarks when flipping through them.
@@MilesClarkeMusic Honestly, the only pro of writing on paper is the feeling of it. Which can't be replicated even with Digital Pencils and screen mattes that are supposed to give you the paper feeling. But the accessibility and customization in digital writing is just insane.
Hey! When you are in a class, what do you do in terms of covering the content being taught? Do you just roughly write it down on a piece of paper and then make these notes on the pad?
i did something like this for my fluid mechanics and thermal physics course, and i dont feel like it helped that much, beyond the fact that it motivated me to actually read the book.
I have a REQUEST for you. Could you PLEASSEEE make a short video about what topics are there and the general essence of Linear Algebra at the Undergraduate level ?? (( In ur Measure Theory series to come ... video you said you like Linear Algebra haha so I thought why not ask you about it ^_ ^ ))
Could you PLEASE read your undergrad Linear Algebra textbook to discover the “general essence” ? I know that is a novel concept for you and would suck away valuable video game playing time , but Anton carefully read would help you to be more personally responsible for your learning outcomes rather than BEGGING someone to facilitate your learning.
I guess you forgot to turn on CAPTION while uploading the video. Please I'll suggest you help us with that subsequently. And thanks a great deal for these wonderful insights.
@@TeofilWhite I agree that he speaks very clearly. But captions are not for people who "don't speak clearly" (captions won't help much with that heh) but as an accessibility feature (and potentially translation).
I have! Even argued with a tutor about it and then found it in my notes 😅 still have no memory of learning it. Pretty problematic actually cuz it means that I don’t go over the stuff I learn enough.
I take a photo of my notes, convert to text (mostly possible) using Google Lens and import to Obsidian for cross linking (building knowledge graph). Only then they become useful.
do you actually go back and read your notes long after having taken them? I find that I use notes to study the material and review in the short term, but don't really consult my own notes after a long time has passed. I usually just reconstruct the material again from the book.
Hi, how do you write your notes? I mean you read the book and write down the notes immediately or you try to write some time later, while trying to remember the subject? Do you only write the theory or do the notes contain the exercises too?
I'm in 9th grade I am in shock what are those crazy math stuffs. Right now we've been studying quadratics, trigonometry, squares, ratios, pythagorean theorem
I recognized some bits of complex analysis :) as a CS engineering undergrad I took this class and our teacher wants us to make the proofs (cauchy's theorem, laplace and fourier transforms...). I thought this was hard until I saw your notes, you have a beautiful handwriting and cartesian way of storing information on paper, I am very impressed ! Do you study encryption or probability theory ?
When you take notes from books do you write down the theorems and lemmas note for note or just abbreviate them? Curious what purpose the notes serve? It is to have an abbreviated version of a book so that you don't have to refer back to the actual text?
Curious, why use Legal pads instead of regular notebooks where you can write side-by-side, which i think is easier to read? Although i do admit legal pads look better also feels better
I have maths final board class 12th exam tomorrow you should check sample paper of India Cbse Board grade 12 it's helpful to see which types of maths we have to do in high school
As someone who’s notes amount to little more than a couple of scraps of paper, I really hope that I’ll be able to have even a fraction of your notes someday.
I am a 4th year Physics major student, and what can I say, pure math students are just on another level, impressive.
As a third year physics student, I wholly agree
Physics is just as insane lol
As a second year physics student I agree
Physics is it’s own beast. I would be just as confused if I saw your notes lol
I read somewhere that physics and math majors tend to be the smartest people in a uni. Makes sense too.
Impressive, very nice, let’s see Paul Allen’s notes
Look at that subtle off white color… the tasteful thickness…
Is it possible to compile the notes into a pdf?
i just dont know why but as a student who hardly understands anything about math, i kinda like watching other people show off complicated craps about it. it's just fun to watch something you cant acknowledge
you're unemployed
@@QuintonDeLauda???????
@@QuintonDeLauda that's so out of pocket man
same 😭 like i have a love hate relationship with maths but everytime someone shows up with sm interest in it, i get so happy
@@QuintonDeLauda RUclips comment section: out of context edition (the context isn't exists at the first place)
I love it.
Of course, it all takes up a lot of space and may not be needed in the future, many years later I still refuse to throw away all my notes, which were then given to me with difficulty because of my indiscipline. But it's not just the space or the difficulty; what matters most to me about these mathematical notes is how vividly I experienced pleasurable emotions and how strongly and deeply I gave myself to my curiosity about mathematics.
I have more than a dozen scribbled A5 notebooks with thick sheets on which I wrote with a fountain pen. After a long time, it pleases and delights me to be able to leaf through these old sheets with formulas.
Pleasant memories.
The most fun thing in math for me was deriving equations for anything. I remember deriving the drag equation (velocity as a function of time WITH drag) as a sophomore in highschool. Took 3 pages back and front to get it. Even cleaning the process up afterwards to write down how I got it still took a full front and back paper. So satisfying to look through my old papers though. You get into a state when deriving the equations where it stops looking like an equation and is instead more like a language and it kind of becomes a game or puzzle to solve certain parts of it. Its like you become very fluent in the math. You can just change and manipulate the equation however you want without having to deeply think about the properties and rules of algebra you are using when trying to do a specific thing.
That’s like how I refuse to use electronics for notes. I just can’t. Something about physically writing on paper with my favorite pens and mechanical pencils. Also I think I learn it better on paper for some reason.
what kind of beast you must be to enjoy seeing math formulas, to me they look like nightmares brought into life. I kinda understand your experience too, as i go through the same with arts and chemistry.
Very few people can understand the satisfaction that's derived from drawing - by hand - a small square at the end of your proof to indicate that you're done. This is one of the joys I recall from studying pure math in college and grad school (till I had to stop due to extensive work travels).
Lol, I personally like the QED, but the square is satisfying as well haha
Keep on going brother! When I see such students who're hard workers and put effort in their studies, it genuinely gives me kind of a re-assurance to keep striving. Best of luck! Way to go
it's beautiful. looking back at the notes is always my favorite part
Your videos are very chill and comforting, thanks
This gives a good idea on the amount of work you need to do in order to fully understand a math topic .
Thank you for sharing your notes collection!!
I'm a junior pure math student, and I'm still trying to learn the different approaches math students take to studying the content. Seeing that your notes look pretty similar to mine-- sometimes with proofs and examples, sometimes without lol-- has reassured me that I might be on the right track.
I'd love to see a video about your daily schedule/time management strats while you were/are studying for classes, if you ever feel inspired to make one
when it comes to learning, then you should have a look at the sm-2 algorithm. i can learn so much faster with that algorithm. i am down from 8h of daily studying to 2-3h.
good luck on your future pure math learnings, presonally i found that working with a checklist(i use microsoft's 1 becuase of the sound it makes when you complete things) is quite efficient for me, but when it comes to learning its hard to make yourself tasks or time goals, so i just give myself a checklist of subjects im sufficient/insufficient in and then slowly learn untill i feel acomplished in those things, in addition doing a 6:1 ratio between studing and then taking a break like pomodore is really nice for learning. goodluck and gooday
@@multiarray2320 what is the sm-2 algorithim?
@@LyntonFRtv it's basically spaced repetition
Churchill's "Complex variables and applications" is a great one. Very well written and tons of practice problems. Perfect for starters.
4th year comp sci engg student here, although much of our stuff is done on the computer itself, I still like to make notes while studying different concepts it makes the stuff easy to understand and the night before exam you can just look at the notes. Notes taking is a wonderful thing and if someone can be as organized in note taking process as you are they will get success! Nice video mate enjoyed it!! All the best!
Jesus...so much time and work. You are a hard worker my friend
I love taking notes while reading. I have a hard time comprehending things while reading/hearing (actually less so for maths, but very much so when reading "regular" books - perhaps mild dyslexia?) so I take notes for basically every sentence to help me understand. Problem is that these notes are basically unreadable and unapt for studying later haha.
Very impressive how clean yours look!
yeah, its much better to learn with the hand
same
i find that even if i don't understand or remember anything, or dont even think about it, if i write it down, i can remember it quite well
Ya, I can relate.
Are you a math student 🤔
I guess humans tend to remember what we write with our hand.
While it is time inefficient, I have found that this sort of detailed note taking has yielded the best results for my understanding and problem solving ability
I'm in class right now and I just got a huge burst of motivation. This is so cool!
As an Economics grad student I'm kinda proud that I remember some of these theorems and proofs you showed, didn't expect that to happen.
Yeah because economics today is applied maths
@@UcallmebymynameeBut you don't need to prove theorems in Economics, that is much more difficult than just knowing them.
I think complex analysis, variation limits, measurement, fractals, fourier analysis, convolutions, I think are particularly cool stuff. I’m working with radiometric mapping, infrared camera control, infrared image acquisition, infrared image correction, and hyperspectral imaging tasks. Being involved with the experiments, camera configuration selection and optimization, radiometric source calculations, signal propagation from source to and through the camera, the image processing, and the imaging task performance optimizations provide a very cool system for doing projects that tap into a lot of the different math topics that you were discussing you have covered in your notes. You can expect the references to be sparse, but they will show up throughout all levels of the system and probably in most piles of your notes. Highly suggested trying it out as a side project for experience with applied mathematics.
I find math an extremely mind numbing subject and I wish to remove it from my life
@@Ivee. I find people who hate math extremely mind numbing people and wish to remove them from my life
@@o_sch You seem like a very shallow person if you cannot be around people with a differing opinion.
@@o_sch cringe
@@reformed_attempt_1 Username checks out
Your handwriting is so beautiful omg
Damn, here I was proud of my 130 pages of notes from a 1 year course in introduction to Advanced Engineering math... Pure math students really are on a whole other level
Inspirational video. You seem well organized and put together. Ive a senior undegrad studying cs but ive dreamed of continuing to study textbooks on math physics and philosophy into the future when Im working
The cauchy residue theorem alongside jordan’s lemma are one of the best tools made to solve the most complex integrals.. complex analysis is underappreciated
Thanks bro, this was pretty relaxing. School is pretty stressful right now and seeing this made me feel a lot better
I hope i will pass the exams this year and enter the faculty of higher mathematics. Your videos motivates a lot!
me too , im taking DSE .But not maths
2:03 Your notes is thicker than the book itself…😂
Personally I like taking notes of subjects that are hard to understand or remember -- I don't have algebra 1 notes, for example -- and I prefer to type them in an editor that allows for snippets. I found some and I can now type LaTeX pretty close to how I write or faster for some textbooks. I can't do images quickly but most of the math I consume doesn't rely on images a lot. Having my notes in a digital space also saves physical space, allows me to edit them, check for typos, carry them almost everywhere, and I can share them with others more easily. If I was a slow typer or restricted to pen and paper, I'd take way fewer notes
When you say algebra 1 do you mean graduate algebra 1? Because in no world do I consider that course easy to understand or remember 😂
@@TheIdiothead no lmao. I mean high school algebra 1. When you first learn to solve linear and quadratic equations and factor polynomials
@@atlas4074 ah okay that makes sense.
@@atlas4074 I'm not familiar with college courses, but what exactly is taught in college algebra 1? Vectors and matrices?
@@PXO005 I meant HS algebra 1, sorry. There I learned about solving linear equations, systems of linear equations (though without mentioning linear algebra), slopes of lines, factoring polynomials, and other basic things. I do these things any time I have a calculus or probability problem so it's not worth it to take notes on, e.g., how to expand (x + 3)(x - 7)
Man,you are a hard worker!Bravo!
Wow I'm genuinely impressed 👏
I'm a freshman in med school and I struggle with note taking maybe one day I will be as good as you but first I must fix my hand writing because it's not readable
I think maybe you can share these notes with the people who need it by scanning them . Best of luck
Your handwriting isn't readable? It's like your a doctor already
What’s your schedule like? It’d be interesting to see your day-in-the-life or something similar
Perhaps a topic for a later video :)
I don't know what's weirder, a guy showing off his notes for 25 minutes or 230 thousand people watching this
As a 9th grader, I can say that this is very complex 👍.
Bro same...i actually use 3 colors for my notes so that when i read it through i gets eye appealing...and for each topic i have a 2 notebooks one for lecture notes and one for taking notes from the book... simultaneously if i read any papers notes for that too...my bed and the table is just filled with all notebooks and books
thankyou for sharing them, gave me some inspiration
My biggest problem with note taking is that I often just end up copying the book. Do you have any advice on that?
read first copy after?
first read for a couple of days and spend writing from memory all you read maybe? I have been trying to do this lately as I study Folland's analysis and Lee's topological manifolds
I do the same thing, I don't think it's bad, I don't literally note take *everything* but just theorems with proofs & definitions, I think I benefit because you know the theorem better putting it down in writing and also the notes are a better referrence than the book because it's straight to the point, as long as your actively trying to engange with the material instead of just mindlessly copying it down your fine.
Different approaches work for different people. I am soon to graduate and took really, really bad notes. IMO you don't have to memorize every detail, as long as you can solve a problem, in principle, by knowing what to look up if the situation arises. If you don't believe in platonism, the details are everything, but if you believe in platonism, the details are a matter of course after a good enough understanding.
Skip as many steps as you can so when you re-read your notes you'll have to figure some of the steps on your own.I find that if every step is written out in detail you never use your brain when reading your notes and just sort of skim over them. If you can remember entire proofs just write down the result in your notes and when you are reading them try proving the whole thing
I am very impressed how there appears to be little to no mistakes or scribbles in the notes. This is something I am not capable of. I simply make a lot of mistakes even in my own writing. Not sure it if relates to lack of focus.
Anyway...thanks for sharing!
This dude be having 3 whole pile of notebook on Math while i'm here, having only 1 notebook for the whole semester
I am doing PhD in engineering and I also started out like this. First I had too many registers. Then I switched to blank sheets, but both of them were too hard to manage and I had to many times refer to my notes for looking up old derivations and formulations I had done a year ago and so on. I finally bought a tablet and use to solely take notes and read papers. Never has a gadget been so useful to me before.
Tablet is OP
i justed started learning these! very exciting
If you ever scan these we would love a link, could be good data for LLM training
Everyone prepared me for how hard my 8 week math class was going to be, *no one* prepared me for how many notebooks the class would take up!
This is still relatively less than notes from majors where you only have memorize sh*t
I’m a first year physics and mathematics student and seeing the potential math I could be in is so exciting to me.
If you have a geometry background, I recommend the books by Schlag or Narasimhan although they are a bit advanced. There are also some pretty visual books on complex analysis, such as Wegert's Visual Complex Functions, which uses a visualization technique called phase portraits, or the popular Needham book. I've also heard good things about the German books by Remmert (two GTM volumes) and Freitag (two universitext volumes).
How much time did you spend on average for each tablet of notes? I imagine it varies on topic and personal interest. They look to bw written in ink--impressive.
What is your goal to accomplish with those notes? Information retention? Do you usually read a couple of pages and then try to recall the structure of the proofs and condense them or do you copy it straight away line for line or add your own thoughts to these notes? I'm asking because when I read books I usually annotate and highlight rather than take notes on them. Great work 👍
Hey! Keep those piles through your life, they will be like time travel machines for you some day 😊 is there any reason why you wrote only in one side of the paper? I for example love the comfort of having everything in one side so I don’t have to be turning pages all the time, so I use recycled copies that have one side in blank, but I’d feel kinda bad having left paper sides empty 😅
Thank you, I think I wrote single side because it makes the notes a little more readable and I knew that would be put to good use in the future by someone if not me.
Complex analysis by Punnusamy is nice
1. Can you make a fortune from your notes? Certainly, but how readable it is to others? You said you skipped some chapters, perhaps others might look for chapters you skipped. Perhaps you can digitized them and add to it.
2. Do you use LaTEX or math softwares or writing tools?
3. Is it waste of time? From how you managed to review it and explain it to us, the notes have been really useful to you, and you said therapeutic more than once, so it must be beneficial for you.
4. I assume this is reading notes, since you associate each notes with a book, and I saw you only make few mistakes. I wonder how do you take notes for classes?
Keep up the good work, man. 😉
Can you please provide your handwritten notes link in RUclips discription box
Have you ever considered writing notes on an ipad or something digital? It seems troublesome having so much important work in bulky stacks like that. Idk just my opinion cuz i keep all my notes in my ipad but have missed writing with pen and paper. Im just afraid that it would get ruined or that it would be hard to carry around
Not sure about him, but I personally enjoy taking notes on paper despite having access to digital stuff because it just feels like I can have a much more intimate connection to the notes. I know the subtle nuances of each page and I can flip to pages I need much quicker than swiping to a specific page in a media device. Some sections of the notes may have rougher or smoother paper, which can help to serve as guides and bookmarks when flipping through them.
@@MilesClarkeMusic you print them out. I take my notes on notability, then print them out for study.
@@MilesClarkeMusic Honestly, the only pro of writing on paper is the feeling of it. Which can't be replicated even with Digital Pencils and screen mattes that are supposed to give you the paper feeling. But the accessibility and customization in digital writing is just insane.
Just got a 95/100 on my Calculus BC mock exam, watching this to stay humble
What size are the legal pads ??
Hey! When you are in a class, what do you do in terms of covering the content being taught? Do you just roughly write it down on a piece of paper and then make these notes on the pad?
Goals after I graduate EE from ODU is to work every problem in every textbook before I go to grad school. I want to perfect my craft.
i did something like this for my fluid mechanics and thermal physics course, and i dont feel like it helped that much, beyond the fact that it motivated me to actually read the book.
That shakarchi book for real analysis 😭😭❤️
Great video bro
Keep going 💪
As a second year CS student, I am in great pain when seeing this.
I see all those notepads of a lot of hours of work and get concerned...what I see is the exact reason why you need to take these notes digitally
Are those “legal pads” only in the USA? Because i cant find any in europe
11:26 I thought Fatou's Lemma was in the form: The integral of liminf fn
I have a REQUEST for you. Could you PLEASSEEE make a short video about what topics are there and the general essence of Linear Algebra at the Undergraduate level ?? (( In ur Measure Theory series to come ... video you said you like Linear Algebra haha so I thought why not ask you about it ^_ ^ ))
I will see if I can incorporate it in a video to come. Thank you for the suggestion :)
Could you PLEASE read your undergrad Linear Algebra textbook to discover the “general essence” ?
I know that is a novel concept for you and would suck away valuable video game playing time , but Anton carefully read would help you to be more personally responsible for your learning outcomes rather than BEGGING someone to facilitate your learning.
Never taken notes in my life and im thankfull
Why?
@@mrlaser7580 Looks boring and tedious.
@@elizarr3069 It’s pretty fun once you get the hang of it.
@@mrlaser7580 Spending time doing what I enjoy is also fun.
@@elizarr3069 suit yourself, your never getting into university though.
I guess you forgot to turn on CAPTION while uploading the video. Please I'll suggest you help us with that subsequently. And thanks a great deal for these wonderful insights.
RUclips sometimes takes a while to generate captions for smaller channels. It might automatically add them in a few hours
Just learn english lol
He speaks clear English, no need for captions.
@@TeofilWhite I agree that he speaks very clearly. But captions are not for people who "don't speak clearly" (captions won't help much with that heh) but as an accessibility feature (and potentially translation).
*takes picture of whiteboard 😎
Do any of you sometimes don't remember taking note of a topic while going through the notes? 😅
I have! Even argued with a tutor about it and then found it in my notes 😅 still have no memory of learning it. Pretty problematic actually cuz it means that I don’t go over the stuff I learn enough.
I take a photo of my notes, convert to text (mostly possible) using Google Lens and import to Obsidian for cross linking (building knowledge graph). Only then they become useful.
As Shao Khan would say: Your documenting your demise!!
What does that even mean?
@@mrlaser7580 i was wasted and watched this.
Could you send the differentiation notes that you had made, It would be useful
Imagine if this was just a bunch of LaTeX files on a USB drive nicely sorted into folders
Damnn 🥶
Example of Crystalline solid
do you actually go back and read your notes long after having taken them? I find that I use notes to study the material and review in the short term, but don't really consult my own notes after a long time has passed. I usually just reconstruct the material again from the book.
Congrats on the fast growth:)
Hi, how do you write your notes? I mean you read the book and write down the notes immediately or you try to write some time later, while trying to remember the subject? Do you only write the theory or do the notes contain the exercises too?
Dude I have a giant binder with all of my important notes from undergrad and they are in total about the size of your stack. Insane
Why do you make mathematical notes on lined pads? In Germany, we use checkered pages for that.
I'm in 9th grade I am in shock what are those crazy math stuffs. Right now we've been studying quadratics, trigonometry, squares, ratios, pythagorean theorem
Springer Lecture _Taken_ Notes in Mathematics 😆
Can you scan and make available your notes? Would be willing to pay!
I recognized some bits of complex analysis :) as a CS engineering undergrad I took this class and our teacher wants us to make the proofs (cauchy's theorem, laplace and fourier transforms...). I thought this was hard until I saw your notes, you have a beautiful handwriting and cartesian way of storing information on paper, I am very impressed ! Do you study encryption or probability theory ?
I have studied probability theory and I loved it
I maybe just a tiny bit regret being a maths major.
It may sound crazy but I feel like fatous lemma is haunting me, I see it way more than It should appear 😂
When you take notes from books do you write down the theorems and lemmas note for note or just abbreviate them?
Curious what purpose the notes serve? It is to have an abbreviated version of a book so that you don't have to refer back to the actual text?
not me watching this video instead of studying for my DiffEQ final
le Indians: this is justrevision for the entrance exam for graduation of india
Jee cuck spotted
Mashallah bro keep it up!
He's a muslim ?!?
@@khizzard_069 don't think so, but it's fine if you say that even if they're a non-muslim
The proof, something we the engineers almost always skip 😂
my man please try out digital notetaking, would love to see your perspective of that
Curious, why use Legal pads instead of regular notebooks where you can write side-by-side, which i think is easier to read? Although i do admit legal pads look better also feels better
I can vouch for having endless notes on discrete structures
I have maths final board class 12th exam tomorrow you should check sample paper of India Cbse Board grade 12 it's helpful to see which types of maths we have to do in high school
Can confirm higher-level maths students do not use any color other than black in their notes
i'm interested to know why haven't you used both the pages.
How often do you retake notes? Do you ever go back and rewrite sections (in part or in full) to hammer home definitions?
hey @struggling grad student, which pen do you use to write ur notes
they r really good plz share it
Pilot G-2
@@PhDVlog777 thanks a lot
Why don't you document this stuff online?
As someone who’s notes amount to little more than a couple of scraps of paper, I really hope that I’ll be able to have even a fraction of your notes someday.
What pens or pencils did you use?
id love to just have that its so much info
Hey , there is a mistake in corrolary 3.4 at 3:55 the set omega should be connected
yeah i noticed that too (obviously)
respect...