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actinium226 | 3 months ago

Generally that's what it means. And also when proofs are presented, a rigorous book will go through it fully, whereas a less rigorous one might just sketch out the main ideas of the proof and leave out some of the nitty gritty details (i.e. it's less rigorous to talk about "continuity" as "you can draw it without lifting the pen" as compared to the epsilon-delta definition, but epsilon-delta is pretty detailed and for intro calculus for non-mathematicians you don't really need it).

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mike50|3 months ago

This is the reason that everyone at my university said to just take the Applied version of Calculus 1 and 2 t avoid the proofs.