Where do Sin, Cos and Tan Actually Come From - Origins of Trigonometry - Part 1

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

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  • @AcesAndNates
    @AcesAndNates Год назад +926

    The key to why this video is so good… You walked through the narrative of discovery. This is what so many mathematics teachers do not understand if they taught math like history, then it would be better understood by most.

    • @basirgardezi
      @basirgardezi Год назад +38

      I was going to to say exactly the same thing. But only the best of teachers who know and love to understand mathematics teach this. Unfortunately nowadays it's just superficial teaching just to get the marks.

    • @jamesanderson2176
      @jamesanderson2176 Год назад +28

      I had Trig in high school, then a review in college. Both times, I struggled with the Trig Identities, because we were supposed to memorize them. Years later, I wanted to go back and take my math studies further. I took Trig as a refresher and the Professor introduced the unit circle. I immediately realized that what I'd been struggling to memorize was nothing more than the Pythagorean Theorem. They had just renamed A, B, and C as Trig functions. Why didn't anyone else explain that?

    • @AsheramK
      @AsheramK Год назад +33

      Indeed. -All maths- _Everything_ should be taught with context, not just rote memorization.

    • @sulaak
      @sulaak Год назад +13

      Same here, teachers and lecturers never provide the basic foundation.

    • @yoelbeche6213
      @yoelbeche6213 Год назад +18

      That's why i hated maths when I was in high school.Most teachers don't go deep into the subject and dive through an explanatory of why we using those principles and why it's that way. I'm that kind of person who needs to understand the essence of the matter in order for the bulb to light up and having those 'aha' moments. At that point,it would be a lot more smooth and would make more sense for us. We are so priviledge to have internet nowadays and be able to catch up all of that.

  • @humayunkabir9279
    @humayunkabir9279 Год назад +241

    I am a 66 years old person , I wish some one told this then . It is so simple however the way we were taught we never understood what you explained .
    Now I will teach my grandchildren through this vedio .
    Well done my boy May god bless you

    • @powerwagon3731
      @powerwagon3731 Год назад +13

      The great mystery is solved! I am 62 and finally seen the light.

    • @cvk9581
      @cvk9581 10 месяцев назад +7

      I am 58 years, I had to take biological science because non of my teachers in school taught this secret but had to mugup the formula not knowing the secret. Good job !!

    • @aquiquddinkhan5570
      @aquiquddinkhan5570 10 месяцев назад +5

      Same here

    • @uwanttono4012
      @uwanttono4012 7 месяцев назад +5

      @@powerwagon3731 Me too at 70 yrs old and I finally see the light!! Why wasn't this the very FIRST thing taught to us in trig class in school!

    • @cupcake_toucher445
      @cupcake_toucher445 7 месяцев назад +4

      im 99 and damn this vid changed my life

  • @jinxxpwnage
    @jinxxpwnage Год назад +103

    it's insane how schools seemingly don't teach like this to be time efficient but completely fail to realize it's the things like these that add a sense of discovery and engages the student far more efficiently than simply memorizing the soh cah toa rule for the sake of a grade which at those ages one could simply not care for specially if you're from a lower class non academic family.

    • @boat6float
      @boat6float 6 месяцев назад

      ....but don't worry, there is plenty of time spent teaching stupid "pronouns" and why boys can use the girl's bathrooms.

    • @ThatOneScholar1526
      @ThatOneScholar1526 6 месяцев назад +7

      tbh it's because most teachers(at least outside of a college level/public schools) probably didn't even know about this and are just taught to teach certain concepts.
      It is sad to think about the past when we didn't have the Library of Alexandria in our pockets and you were forced to learn from people who barely understood math and gave inaccurate or no explanation behind their reasoning except "we're adults".

    • @xpwnx1337
      @xpwnx1337 16 дней назад

      They just think we are all too dumb for that lol

    • @jinxxpwnage
      @jinxxpwnage 16 дней назад

      @@xpwnx1337 i know! they think we're lobotomized pigeons

  • @kalvincochran9505
    @kalvincochran9505 Год назад +251

    2 years no part 2

    • @taddessegemmeda8652
      @taddessegemmeda8652 6 месяцев назад +3

      Like for real even with another account ,maybe

    • @troycarpenter3675
      @troycarpenter3675 6 месяцев назад

      😢

    • @stevereid7773
      @stevereid7773 5 месяцев назад +5

      part two and three are behind the patron pay wall. they’re amazing.

    • @mrhernandez739
      @mrhernandez739 5 месяцев назад +4

      Make that 3 😂🎉

    • @profzthecounterstrik
      @profzthecounterstrik 4 месяца назад

      ​@@stevereid7773 you mean their youtube membership? i can't find their patereon

  • @bawbak8800
    @bawbak8800 Год назад +295

    After thirty years, this is the first time that I finally understand WTF are sin and cos.
    This is so weird, in order to understand something as simple as this, we have to waste many years of struggling.
    I really appreciate what you've done 🙏♥

    • @jamese9283
      @jamese9283 Год назад +1

      How were many years wasted?

    • @number5322
      @number5322 Год назад +1

      I've come to the same realization. How could I have not understood this???

    • @polaris1985
      @polaris1985 Год назад +15

      This should be the first lecture when teaching Sin, Cos, Tan... but I think even the teachers don't know about this.

    • @maskedmarvyl4774
      @maskedmarvyl4774 Год назад +6

      It wasn't you; it was your math teachers, who took a simple subject and made it incomprehensible, by teaching math as if you already understood it, with no explanation of the underlying principles, relationships, or purpose in learning the math.
      Even Carl Sagan, the famous astrophysicist, said that when he was young, math teachers taught purely by rote, with no explanations or understanding themselves what they were teaching.

    • @maskedmarvyl4774
      @maskedmarvyl4774 Год назад +2

      @@number5322 , Because your teachers made it incomprehensible with their teaching methods. When I was a kid, students learned In Spite of their teachers, not because of them.

  • @kivakarmen8628
    @kivakarmen8628 9 месяцев назад +42

    When you find out you failed trigonometry because your "teacher" had knowledge but completely lacked understanding...30 years later

  • @DarklingReborn
    @DarklingReborn 2 года назад +540

    Unironically the best explanation I’ve seen. Now judging by his posting schedule we’ll have part 2 in the next month or so

  • @FreeSpeech1959
    @FreeSpeech1959 11 месяцев назад +10

    Understand it. Unfortunately 55 years after taking my school maths exam.

    • @aniketb2010
      @aniketb2010 5 месяцев назад

      Fortunately 25 years for me 😛

  • @saleem801
    @saleem801 2 года назад +533

    I wish conceptual explanations like this were given in school. I was good at maths but this would have given me a much better basis

    • @sfllhrz
      @sfllhrz 2 года назад +7

      same

    • @billdavies6463
      @billdavies6463 2 года назад +13

      You were... but you weren't listening.

    • @JohnLincolnUSA
      @JohnLincolnUSA 2 года назад +2

      same with me as well

    • @saleem801
      @saleem801 2 года назад +29

      @@billdavies6463 speak for yourself

    • @moneer7139
      @moneer7139 2 года назад +3

      @@billdavies6463 nah i never knew the actual value of things like rad3/2, but knowing its just.866 is mindblowing

  • @veto_5762
    @veto_5762 Год назад +59

    I would love more teachers telling why this kind of stuff works and why it's useful instead of just teaching you how to do it, it turns it from daunting to actually interesting

    • @tehedx
      @tehedx Год назад

      It helped me that I was coding and experimenting with these functions. Loop from 0 to some random number, put sin on the x axis, cos on the y and hey look, it's drawing circles! Cool, but no idea what I could do with it. It later made sense that it could be used to move a character on the screen in a certain direction and speed.
      Fast forward 3 decades, there are probably a lot of libraries that take the work of making game physics out of your hands :)

    • @algirdasltu1389
      @algirdasltu1389 Год назад

      Thats why im glad my math teacher shows how all the stuff we learn is derived. although we're not at trig yet.

    • @lawpilot8526
      @lawpilot8526 6 месяцев назад

      5/8/2024 - The utility, I.e., usefulness, of trig is learned through word problems, studying calculus, physics, navigation, chemistry and electric circuits.

  • @theobserver7690
    @theobserver7690 2 года назад +825

    bro left us on a cliff hanger for 8 months now💀

    • @Rdkubala
      @Rdkubala 2 года назад +116

      Over a year now, maybe the maths hasn't been invented yet? Hahaha

    • @standowner6979
      @standowner6979 2 года назад +15

      @@Rdkubala maybe?

    • @prakharmishra5583
      @prakharmishra5583 2 года назад +12

      @@standowner6979 uh bro this is just basic trigonometry there's way more advanced maths they teach us 😭😭😭

    • @standowner6979
      @standowner6979 2 года назад +47

      @@prakharmishra5583 I know some people don't get sarcasm, but dang! It's still annoying when it happens to you.
      I know about Real Analysis, Groups, Rings, Fields, Galois Theory, Ergodic Dynamical systems, etc.

    • @prakharmishra5583
      @prakharmishra5583 2 года назад +2

      @@standowner6979 ah nvm happens with everyone, have a good one

  • @harvymckiernan93
    @harvymckiernan93 Год назад +1

    I switched off from my studies as a young student because no teacher could explain the relationship between the Sin 0.5 and Cosine 0.866 values, etc. They were too busy wrapped up in numbers without any visual clues.
    If only my teacher had drawn a circle on the blackboard and split it into quadrants. Forming the x and y axis, and then said, treat the radius as one unit. Project an angle ( let's say 30° through the centre of the quadrant) and where it meets the circumference (1 unit= let's say 100mm for the purpose of the exercise), drop a perpendicular intersection to the x axis. That would be 86mm (0.86).Then, project a perpendicular intersection to the y axis from the same point on the circumference, which would form the 50mm (0.5). Therefore, forming the relationships between sine and cosine. And Tan would be the intersection of the y axis, hence the reason it's infinity at 90°. It would have made so much more sense earlier on in my life. After that, it's all simple ratio and proportion, which you've explained really well here.

  • @jadenephrite
    @jadenephrite 2 года назад +27

    Regarding 6:58 Trigonometric Table. Before the invention of the electronic calculator, the logarithmic Slide Rule was a handheld calculator commonly used. A Slide Rule having trigonometric scales could calculate Sin, Cos and Tan. The S Scale was used for Sin and Cos. The T Scale was used for Tan. The ST Scale was used for Sin, Cos and Tan for angles less than 5.74 degrees.

    • @19Pyrus70
      @19Pyrus70 2 года назад +1

      I remember slide rules, but never got to use 1 because by the time I got to take basic geometry in junior high, trig tables were the order of the day & by the time I got to take elementary functions in high school, calculators were.
      How could I know about slide rules if I never used 1? They were incorporated into the pen & pencil boxes one used to buy for school back in the 80's & earlier.

  • @johanesberglund2613
    @johanesberglund2613 6 месяцев назад +7

    by far the best explanation of Sin, Cos and Tan i've ever heard
    That you explain it from the ground up instead of the normal "it's just a rule, learn it" approach makes it so much easier to understand....almost seem simpel now

  • @SgarnANME
    @SgarnANME 2 года назад +89

    It’s been over a year, and I’m still waiting for a part two. There’s no other video that explains it as well as this one. Surprised there’s so little views…

  • @TheAzurTim
    @TheAzurTim 11 месяцев назад +1

    in my 27 years of age and collage highschool and elementary NO ONE HAS EVER PRESENTED IT BETTER THAN THIS
    If it was i would had long finished collage by now and not be dropout...

  • @memirandawong
    @memirandawong 2 года назад +32

    I've been through maths half way thru calculus and this is the first video I've seen that has illustrated this concept so succinctly.

  • @michaelzeng77
    @michaelzeng77 Год назад +19

    why don't they teach this at school instead of just giving us soh cah toa

  • @FatLingon
    @FatLingon 2 года назад +18

    Ever since a teacher (20+ years ago) told the class that the code in computers and calculators to calculate Sin is several pages long, I've though Sin is some impossible thing for me to ever be able to understand, so I have avoided sin/cos/tan as much as possible when programming (as I prefer if my code relies on things I understand). But now, youtube recomended this video and I thought I could at least give 10 minutes of my life to try and see what Sin is all about.... and yeah, wow, that was simple to understand. Thank you for a very elegant explanation. :)

    • @wasay456
      @wasay456 2 года назад

      Calculators, especially 2 decades ago, used numerical method to calculate Trig values. For Sin would be Angle-Ang^3/3!+.... so..even though several pages might be exaggeration, your teacher was in theory correct.

    • @drgusman
      @drgusman 2 года назад

      @@wasay456 In fact 30-40 years ago if you needed a fast SIN or COS function what you used was a precomputed table of values so it may not be an exaggeration...

  • @somakun1806
    @somakun1806 9 месяцев назад +15

    2 years still no part 2 😞

  • @JohnLincolnUSA
    @JohnLincolnUSA 2 года назад +64

    I learned this about 50 years ago... I understood it well then but I wish there were teachers like this in the old days. Trigonometry and Logarithm tables used to confound me as to their purpose in life! Well done Mr. Syed.

    • @RPSchonherr
      @RPSchonherr Год назад

      OH yeah, how is the log derived? That was also on my mind in college algebra besides how sin and cos are.

    • @teknul89
      @teknul89 Год назад +4

      Because you are not meant to learn it, they just want you to memorize everything and perform to each test which is not a good way to understand the topic but just making people go through a class to class

    • @seagulyus9251
      @seagulyus9251 Год назад +1

      ​@@RPSchonherr
      One Scottish mathematician had a brilliant breakthrough before calculus was an understood concept according to Wikipedia. Look up history of logarithms page there,. "Napier conceived the logarithms as the relationship between two particles moving along a line, one at a constant speed and the other at a speed proportional to its distance from a fixed endpoint." Dude literally just... went "logarithms!" and it caught on.

  • @19Pyrus70
    @19Pyrus70 2 года назад +7

    Reading some of the comments here, I can only wonder what kind of teaching actually goes on in school these days. What was shown in this video was exactly what was taught by my math teachers. I remember being shown the unit circle & how all the sin, cos, tan, & their inverse angle values were derived from it. Logarithms & natural logarithms were the things I didn't fully grasp: just enough to mechanically solve the problems, but not enough to fully understand what I was actually doing.

  • @The_Horizon
    @The_Horizon 2 года назад +21

    holy hell this channel is a goldmine, I wondered where these random numbers came from, I sort of just mechanically did the formulas my teacher told us. Thank you!

  • @dimitarjovanovski1873
    @dimitarjovanovski1873 Год назад +10

    This video is awesome, because it most importantly explains WHY these functions exist.
    Not like in school where the teacher just blabers out the equations & goes about his/her day.

  • @jennyhuynh4469
    @jennyhuynh4469 Год назад +4

    In Vietnam, we learn the formula via a poem:
    "Tìm sin lấy đối chia huyền
    Cosin lấy cạnh kề, huyền chia nhau
    Còn tang ta hãy tính sau
    Đối trên, kề dưới chia nhau ra liền
    Cotang ngược lại với tang."
    It's nice to see many adults come here to check their memory like I do. Love the way you guys remember it: SOHCAHTOA : easy peasy :)

    • @youarenotme01
      @youarenotme01 5 месяцев назад

      may i ask, do you alter the pitch of words to denote meaning in the poem?

  • @jamesleehunter
    @jamesleehunter Год назад +1

    If I imagine not having ever learned this, I think this video would be too much too quick. But as a review video it's absolutely amazing. Especially for those of us that always have the niggling "but why??"

  • @rosscameron6585
    @rosscameron6585 6 месяцев назад +8

    I was an A maths student right up until Year 9. The last thing I remember encountering in maths was SOH CAH TOA.
    I never understood it (or the strong accent of my teacher), and it was never explained to me in a way that made sense. I fell behind, started failing, and dropped out of school after Year 11.
    I'm 48 now, and you just explained Sin, Cos, and Tan in a way that I actually understand!
    Thank you. 😀

  • @TaiChiRehab
    @TaiChiRehab Год назад

    Lo l - said in a polite way - the changes in your tone really do tell where you get confused / excited by how maths might explain or show something yet to be seen in life

  • @vascoribeiro69
    @vascoribeiro69 Год назад +4

    My father had only the 4th grade (b. 1944) and started working with 10yo as tinsmith apprentice in is uncle shop. He told me that he found the relationship (pi) between diameter and perimeter to help him cutting the metal sheet with proper dimensions.

  • @Adarsh_amd
    @Adarsh_amd Год назад +2

    Noooo just when I started "getting" trigonometry for the first time, please come back with the part 2

  • @raytheron
    @raytheron 2 года назад +10

    Reminds me of Mathematics in high school in South Africa in the late 60s. Each of us had what we called a "log book", which contained all the values of sine, cosine and tan, as well as all the logarithmic tables (no calculators then!).

  • @samuelsanchezmaza6926
    @samuelsanchezmaza6926 3 года назад +116

    Please do part 2! I'm struggling with trygonometric functions and this is the first video that makes me sense about this. 🙏🙏

    • @amrwael4261
      @amrwael4261 3 года назад +5

      Hey it has been 5 months since he has uploaded this video do you know where to find part 2 if he uploaded it

    • @aurapain5757
      @aurapain5757 2 года назад +3

      @@amrwael4261 lol it's been a year now

    • @muhammedzaid857
      @muhammedzaid857 2 года назад +1

      @@aurapain5757 still 🤐

    • @RajSingh-uv6eq
      @RajSingh-uv6eq 2 года назад +1

      @@muhammedzaid857 still waiting

    • @bobocgabrielcatalin9557
      @bobocgabrielcatalin9557 2 года назад +2

      Still waiting 🍺

  • @fahadalghamdi9316
    @fahadalghamdi9316 11 месяцев назад +2

    I'm two years late, But I have to congratulate you on teaching mathematics the way it should have been taught, through logical discovery and abstraction. Mathmatics is a tool, a utility, and using it as such helps with understanding it.

  • @tenwalls2428
    @tenwalls2428 Год назад +4

    Paused at 3.32 to just sit here in disgust remembering my college trig encounter. But, I discovered from that same era, it's the presentation that makes all the difference. So, thanks! The best presentation of this material I've seen on RUclips, without question.

  • @dermott3957
    @dermott3957 2 года назад +1

    I am 70 next birthday, I have never had this explained, not at school or work. I got by by always following a predetermined method
    You made the helpful simple assumption that the person does not know what youre talking about, and started there
    I hope you return
    Thanks

  • @justanormalasian001
    @justanormalasian001 Год назад +5

    Honestly, when you know the purpose of all these maths it helps you learn it more quickly and efficiently. That's why I searched for it and I am glad I did.

  • @xpwnx1337
    @xpwnx1337 16 дней назад +2

    lmao, I finally understand the formula's to calculate diameters and circumferences. Why didn't my teacher never said that pi is equal to cirumferences divided by the diameter. Also his teaching methods, the way he talks, and the way he tries us let us think like we are doing the research is just brilliant teaching. They should clone this man!

  • @tworiversmeet
    @tworiversmeet 2 года назад +5

    Wow! I was really good at maths but missed a year. When I rejoined after a year in college and trigonometry was rushed through, I was clueless. I wondered what the heck Sin, Cos and Tan were. Now I understand... finally.

  • @edjohnson2192
    @edjohnson2192 11 месяцев назад +3

    Sin comes from doing bad things that God doesn't like.
    Tan comes from exposing my melanin to the Sun.
    Cos? Not too sure about that word. 😂

    • @PS-hv7on
      @PS-hv7on 11 месяцев назад +1

      Cos is a lettuce.
      Trigonometry was all about offending God while suntanning and enjoying a salad. Who knew?

  • @sheelamanjegowda9209
    @sheelamanjegowda9209 13 дней назад +2

    This is the correct way to explain mathematics ❤Thank you so much ..RUclips or any other field I request you to continue teaching this way please...the world needs more people like you ❤

  • @mrdaft3272
    @mrdaft3272 2 года назад +6

    Hands down the best explanation for something that I was asking about in grade 10 many years ago....no one ever could explain it to me while I was in school. They just told me to use the Sin/Cos/Tan function without explaining what they were for. I am not sure if there is a place for this in every day life...but I am sure if I thought about it long enough, I could find a way to use it every day.

    • @dubledeuce875
      @dubledeuce875 Год назад

      Sin/Cos/Tan is VERY helpful in finding a point on a circles edge when you know the xy coordinates. But this video shows the graphic representation of these ideas. Once you understand something visually it is hard to forget it. He did a good job here. I am an automotive technology instructor and I have a goal in my class, , or motto if you will, of NOT teaching people what I know, rather to tell them what they NEED to know, to understand the subject matter. Believe me, the approach make a difference.
      Darrow...for the Prosecution

    • @thefamousdjx
      @thefamousdjx Год назад

      Thats how other people who truly understand mathematics are able to innovate and build amazing software like 3d design programs, or create vector databases and come up with all these similarity search algorithms. If all math was taught like this, most people will be really innovative with it. I'm still to understand what exactly integration does in real life lol

  • @humayunkabir9279
    @humayunkabir9279 Год назад +1

    The only thing i remember is
    Some people have
    S= p/h
    Curly brown hair
    Cos = bass/ hypotinuse
    Till painted black
    Tan = perpendicular/base

    • @nixonxc7157
      @nixonxc7157 Год назад

      Or just pbp hhb
      P/h, b/h and p/b

  • @CaptainKaos420
    @CaptainKaos420 2 года назад +1

    34 year old man in college learning to do IT maths and coding HTML and my lord maths somebody kill me now but im getting there and your videos are an amazing help to me

  • @Riddzslayy
    @Riddzslayy 4 месяца назад +7

    The worst thing is that they never teach "how?" in school and that's why it doesn't stick in the mind. Gotta say this video was simple but informative👍

  • @lutang771
    @lutang771 Год назад +2

    Seriously, this is why most students struggle math. Teachers should take note how this was explained and it has more sense. In my days, my teacher will just jump on something and don't bother to explain why it's like that, just deal with it. So you end up memorizing it and doesn't have any importance and eventually forgot about it.

  • @Noone-rt6pw
    @Noone-rt6pw Год назад +3

    This was never spelled out as I recall, in school. Where as others have said, they learn more from you tube than school. Where knowing how to teach is an actual skill. Knowing the subject is a skill. Thoroughly knowing the subject and demonstrating application gives it rational meaning so one knows what they be doing.
    Miss Pietsu was an excellent math teacher I had, but she wasn't with public school system.

  • @sakinazehra6460
    @sakinazehra6460 11 месяцев назад +1

    Lucky to watch this video today. The fact is that today was the introductory class of trignomey at school😊😊.

  • @danhayward9186
    @danhayward9186 Год назад +3

    Being a maths teacher is a gift so few of them around it is such a beautifull thing once you understand the basics

  • @wisamamr5514
    @wisamamr5514 6 месяцев назад +2

    And I always ask myself where did the Pi come from and what is the relation between the triangle and circle, this presentation gives really an awesome explanation, thanks dude.

  • @rocktheman56
    @rocktheman56 Год назад +6

    Great work sir ! .. I wish school teachers had same simple approach. My Love for maths has grown over the time but lack of basic always pushed me back.

  • @mitchelltj1
    @mitchelltj1 Год назад

    Thanks! I'm so glad to be reminded of SOH CAH TOA from 9th grade, which was many years ago.

  • @leokeatonn
    @leokeatonn 2 года назад +4

    Jesus Christ, I’m in *college* and this is the very first time anyone has ever explained this to me in this way.
    Seriously I’ve gone my whole academic life without ever connecting the actual understanding between Sohcahtoa and the universal outputs they’ll create

    • @leokeatonn
      @leokeatonn 6 дней назад

      Hold on, I have no memory of this place...

  • @davidghydeable
    @davidghydeable 5 месяцев назад +1

    Nearly 60 years old, got O'level and A'Level in maths and used it in my engineering courses. Never have I seen trigonometry explained so well

  • @MrGchiasson
    @MrGchiasson 2 года назад +4

    Sir, I just sub'd.
    I wish I'd had you as my math teacher in High School when I began studying trigonometry & algebra.
    You're detail & I sights clarifies a great deal...and so easy to understand.
    I'm 68 years old and retired now.
    You actually make this instruction....fun!

  • @xygenjipson
    @xygenjipson Год назад +1

    The greatest teacher i'v ever encountered

  • @alanpmasters
    @alanpmasters Год назад +4

    Thank you. That was clear and concise even to me, a musician. I vaguely remember it was a way of finding the height of a lamp post without having to climb up it and dangle a tape measure. In my day, pocket calculators hadn't been invented so we had pocket sized books of these three tables instead!

  • @moonkeele
    @moonkeele Год назад +1

    I'm so old, calculators only became affordable when I was in my 2nd or 3rd year of high school. For the first year or two we had books of printed tables of Sine, Cos and Tan values. I still remember the mnemonc See Old Harry Come Along Here To Offer Advice.

  • @TheSfSunflower
    @TheSfSunflower Год назад +3

    yes, it is true that someone else came up with that theorem first, but you brought to clarity for at least myself. Thank you!

  • @akshitstenaa
    @akshitstenaa 11 месяцев назад +1

    I am 34 now & I feel this is the first time I could actually understand the entire narrative of Trigonometry . Thx a ton brother

  • @JohnJackson-mn4ts
    @JohnJackson-mn4ts 2 года назад +4

    Thank you.
    When I was studying math (all those eons ago), they taught to the exam, it was enough that when given the question we could (most of the time) calculate the correct answer. Our teacher never really explained why. (Perhaps she didn’t know why herself 😱)

  • @PsalmCourier
    @PsalmCourier Месяц назад +1

    Im trying to expand my knowledge in this field of mathematics its kind of a new "frontier" for me. Kind of exciting I was never much a math kid in my youth.. Studying for electrical long story short. I noticed some familiar values listed on this video, being 1.732, known to me as, the square root of three. And.. 0.707, which is known to me as, Root Mean Square (like with RMS voltages) 1 divided by the square root of 2 (1/1.414) = ..... 0.707 roughly. Very encouraging to me for some reason. Maybe some of your sharper viewers can make sense of these. Our AC power comes in the form of a sine wave, spinning on a circular armature in a turbine somewhere, that would be where. 3 Phase power is offset, phase to phase by 120 degrees electrically, and geometrically in these generator windings. I cant make further sense yet of these but figured id toss it out there for others to chew on. Some very smart people, new to the electrical fields might find use in them.

  • @lesterjohnescanlar5446
    @lesterjohnescanlar5446 Год назад +5

    Been watching this type of tutorials for a while, and just now, i realized that none of my professors back in high school and college ever relate these things to actual stuff in real world. That these topics are derived and developed by resolving problems in real life. I wished someone taught me math this way.

  • @navysailor1980
    @navysailor1980 Год назад +2

    I wish I had this visual aid in school, our teachers made it hard for us to learn anything, as if they enjoyed seeing students struggle. This was in the 90's.

  • @ipopus2
    @ipopus2 2 года назад +2

    Nice video. Fun fact : I'm a math teacher in France and we teach the same mnemonic to our students : SOHCAHTOA.

  • @vgpaln8104
    @vgpaln8104 Год назад +6

    You have taught basics so well, very beautifully explained, nobody taught the basics this way

  • @Da_Little_Dude
    @Da_Little_Dude Год назад +1

    Never thought I would want to search things I will learn 3 years later.

  • @listplaylist
    @listplaylist 2 года назад +29

    This video was really well made and you're very talented at explaining these topics, I'm looking forward to a part 2

  • @brandonlai9388
    @brandonlai9388 10 месяцев назад +1

    love it, really the basic concept "all you need" that introduce Trigonometry

  • @Abdullah_hakim
    @Abdullah_hakim 3 года назад +27

    so far the best video on understanding the primary knowledge about trig. keep up the good work.. i hope part 2 is coming soon

  • @santialterman3066
    @santialterman3066 8 месяцев назад +2

    I cannot express how grateful I am for this video. Incredibly consice and informative. Im studying engineering and I seriously needed this, as I now COMPREHEND trig functions, thanks to your clear explanation. I hope you continue uploading. Again, thank you

  • @pinchermartyn3959
    @pinchermartyn3959 Год назад +20

    Thank you. You've taught me more in the length of this video than I ever learnt at school.

    • @mrgcav
      @mrgcav Год назад

      you "learnt" in school?? You need to go back.

    • @JohnPreston888
      @JohnPreston888 Год назад

      "Ever"? Seems a bit of an exaggeration. You learnt proper punctuation and capitalisation. But really, you either attended school for less than 9m 14s, or you suffer from severe retrograde amnesia. Or you are exaggerating...

  • @Desi.Kangaroo
    @Desi.Kangaroo Год назад +1

    It’s been 20 years, now I understand it. I don’t blame my teacher completely, I was just a teenager and i didn’t really care but if it was taught the way you did may be it would have made it easier and sparked some interest.. anyways now I’m an artist 😊

  • @azharmahmood1646
    @azharmahmood1646 Год назад +5

    Superb explanation. I wish schools and textbooks should also explain like this. Great Work.

  • @tiortedrootsky
    @tiortedrootsky 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you! It never stuck in school, your explanation has good potential for sinking in!

  • @slashsplat
    @slashsplat Год назад +3

    Never had use of them, but now actually understand what they are. Excellent presentation. Thank you.

  • @heydyvex
    @heydyvex 10 месяцев назад +1

    Oh man, I finally have a clear understanding about trig functions

  • @goldeer7129
    @goldeer7129 2 года назад +9

    This was amazing, please make a part 2 ! I would absolutely love it to have the next part of the story !

    • @BuFu1O1
      @BuFu1O1 2 года назад

      guy probably ded

  • @dorylubliner-filmeditor365
    @dorylubliner-filmeditor365 Год назад +1

    This video should start by saying that "Sin, Cos and Tan" are abbreviated Latin words.
    They are Sinus (Sine), Cosinus (Cosine) and Tangent (Tangere).

  • @SelfImprovement-o7o
    @SelfImprovement-o7o 8 месяцев назад +8

    *2 YEARS ?!?!!!*

  • @monicadimitrova2396
    @monicadimitrova2396 Год назад +1

    Syed my man, let's see Part 2 😅, I was hoping I have one more year but kiddo has been steadily going to advanced math, i need to brush up 😜

  • @maskedmarvyl4774
    @maskedmarvyl4774 Год назад +4

    This is the best explanation of the basic trig. functions I have seen. Like many other commenters on here, I wish to God I had seen something like this when I was a kid; I would have been much less afraid to take trigonometry and other math courses, which I aways assumed I would fail (and would have failed, given the horrible math teachers I had, which taught purely by rote, with no explanation of relationships or purpose in the math).

  • @stellaluna1374
    @stellaluna1374 2 месяца назад +1

    This is a very good explanation, exactly how I remember that from school in Europe. Unfortunately I don't see this way of teaching nowadays in US schools. Math is not just memorization, a students should learn a concept first and then you understand the formula even without memorization

  • @stoikiymuzhik_high-schoole1057
    @stoikiymuzhik_high-schoole1057 Год назад +3

    If online resources like this was available during my days, I think many students could have landed on a better career path.
    I wanted to be an ECE during my days because I was so curious how electronic things work, but due to my poor math skills I never pursued it.
    It is fascinating nowadays how information / knowledge is very much accessible for almost everyone but very unfortunate that many students nowadays do not grab this kind of opportunity to learn things.

  • @BadThrusher
    @BadThrusher 11 месяцев назад +1

    I used to hate Maths in school. I used to feel less capable but as an adult, I realise all my teachers sucked. I wish I had a teacher who would explain maths this well, my grades would have been great but I won't regret

  • @bonehelm
    @bonehelm 2 года назад +14

    Part 2 please! Such a good explanation!

  • @MicroAngelo1
    @MicroAngelo1 Год назад +2

    This never made sense when I studied it in class 35 years ago , I'm almost getting it now! Will start using my HP-35c again! Excellent presentation!!

  • @gilltim5711
    @gilltim5711 2 года назад +4

    Excellent. This is the first time I've ever understood where sine and cosine come from, and what they mean. Thank you!!!

  • @jaydipkarar
    @jaydipkarar 2 года назад +1

    I wish I had you 12 years ago when I was in 10th studying trigonometry for the first time..

  • @mahfuz4174
    @mahfuz4174 3 года назад +9

    Bruhh wheres the part 2. Its been 5 monthss

  • @abushalibu1433
    @abushalibu1433 Год назад +1

    After so many years of my life Today only I noticed how the Clark's table was prepared for all the angles 0 to 90 Very good teaching Hatts of your knowledge

  • @aphermal
    @aphermal Год назад +4

    I'm a 7th grader who's curiosity went beyond the level of normal humans

    • @morikun09
      @morikun09 7 месяцев назад +1

      Im a 4th grader

    • @Bussysaka
      @Bussysaka 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@morikun09 gugu gaga

    • @laabib44
      @laabib44 7 месяцев назад

      if you took a moment to truly understand the vid, congrats you're gonna do great in maths!!

  • @DustinRodriguez1_0
    @DustinRodriguez1_0 Год назад +1

    Back when I was in junior high school in the early 1990s, I got really into computers and coding. I was playing with making graphical programs that would display things, like flying through a starfield and stuff. I knew all the geometry stuff about triangles, and realized that the ratios of different sides and angles would hold for right triangles, and made code to let me create pseudo-3D stuff (like you would set a point in 3D, but it would figure out what 2D location to actually put it on the screen through using these ratios to figure out all the lengths needed). The next year in school we had trigonometry and I discovered all these ratios I had been using had names like sine, cosine, tangent. I always wondered why in class they never really explained it based on the ratios that become obvious once you've had geometry and learned about similar triangles. It seemed very intuitive that way for me.

  • @sheshathri5099
    @sheshathri5099 2 года назад +6

    Your the man i am searching all over in RUclips,your doing great job in mathematics and i am waiting eagerly for your videos

  • @cto_plushtubing
    @cto_plushtubing Год назад +1

    This is a great intro to trigonometry, those who never did any trigonometry.

  • @chennaiboy8465
    @chennaiboy8465 Год назад +4

    Without doubt I would have been an accomplished engineer had I been taught practically like this. I simply couldn’t comprehend and ended up just scoring 80% and moved on without entering engineering subjects. I can’t marry something without knowing its fundamentals. Somehow I had to byheart with a heavy heart. Amazing video

  • @florentinosanchez3969
    @florentinosanchez3969 Год назад +3

    Best video ever

  • @VaibhavShenoy29
    @VaibhavShenoy29 10 месяцев назад +1

    I thank you bro, for helping me learn the thing that I have been literally searching for a long time

  • @ahmedwael3971
    @ahmedwael3971 11 месяцев назад +3

    Bro took longer time to release part 2 than avengers end game

  • @Kumar_MSME_IITH
    @Kumar_MSME_IITH 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for the video bro.......... Really appreciate the way you teach........

  • @Merry_il
    @Merry_il 10 дней назад +4

    3 years and still no part two