(no title)
chasely | 10 months ago
I think the hardest part of self-studying anything that has some formal math foundations is knowing _what_ to pay attention to. There's so much in just the first chapter of the probability book. Is having a general understanding of set theory enough or should I actually know how to prove a function is a singular function?
That's why I often like to find a university course with lectures posted online so I can use that as a rough guideline for what's important, but I haven't quite found that yet for stochastic calculus. Would love if someone coul point me to one.
[0]: https://www.amazon.com/dp/3030976815 [1]: https://www.amazon.com/dp/9811247560
No comments yet.