Are there guides for math self education like there are for programming? (for examples in programming self education, see: https://functionalcs.github.io/curriculum/, https://github.com/open-source-society/computer-science and https://teachyourselfcs.com/).
>>9158652
BAMPERINO
>>9158652
I don't know any like the ones you posted, but there are some charts and guides (like the one in the pic related which I think I got from the wiki) made by the people here, but I don't have them
Bump I need this
Khan Academy has math curriculum starting literally from counting up through calculus and linear algebra.
How to become a pure mathematician is a blog that has many books and resources. The blog has many stages, each stage has a different branch of mathematics of course goes from elementary to Advanced topics, another resource is Berkeley's page Undergraduate Mathematics bibliography or something like that, well it's my opinion.
let's wait what others are saying. Bump
>>9158806
please leave my thread if you're going to save images as gifs
>>9158806
could that map be any less coherently organized?
>>9158652
Bump
>>9158652
What is your goal here? Why do you want to study mathematics? Unless your aim is to become a professional mathematician, I think your best bet will be to learn whatever specific topics interest you. You'll naturally gravitate to things at your skill level because the advanced stuff will bore you, and by doing this iteratively you'll grow more and more advanced. The resources in this thread and the /sci/ wiki and math stack exchange have good textbook recommendations.
>>9159816
Ok but what do you do after calculus?
>>9159819
Generally that's when you can go into whatever you fancy.
>>9159819
Linear algebra.
if you are asking so many brainlet questions, then you simply don't have what it takes