Is there a specific order somebody who wants to brush up on their maths should go about it? I was looking for an order to do it in, pic related.
Would love your advice /sci/!
Use Basic Mathematics by Lang, it's what I'm using and it's good.
>>7642283
A book? I would prefer to do it on the internet if possible?
>>7642283
Actually I Googled that book and I think it's too advanced for me.
I just need something really basic.
>>7642270
If you're looking for a progression like that you should identify your starting point.
Do you really need to go over numbers again?
>>7642343
No. I guess I just need to start with Arithmetic.
I'm bad at maths. I apologise.
>>7642270
http://4chan-science.wikia.com/wiki/Math_Textbook_Recommendations
>>7642538
I think that's too advanced.
I just wanted a general order I could Google in or a page to work through.
>>7642551
Whats too advanced, it literally starts with preschool
>>7642551
Just skip the geometry stuff:
Secrets of Mental Math by Benjamin
Functions and Graphs by Gelfand, Glagoleva, and Shnol
The Method of Coordinates by Gelfand, Glagoleva, and Kirillov
Elements of Algebra by Euler (http://web.mat.bham.ac.uk/C.J.Sangwin/euler/ElementsAlgebra.html)
Algebra by Gelfand and Shen
Trigonometry by Gelfand and Saul
Matrices and Linear Algebra by Schneider and Barker
<random exponentials and logarithms resource (you'll understand them better when you get to calculus anyway)>
Elementary Calculus: An Infinitesimal Approach by H. Jerome Keisler
Ordinary Differential Equations by Tenenbaum & Pollard
A Transition to Advanced Mathematics by Smith, Eggen, and Andre