Derivative Applications - Formula Sheet: bit.ly/4eV6r1b Final Exams and Video Playlists: www.video-tutor.net/ Next Video: th-cam.com/video/SL2RobwU_M4/w-d-xo.html
As I've always said, TH-cam should take its hat off before this guy and awards him as TEACHER OF HUMANITY. And gives him ALL HE WANTS: a house, money, etc.....
@@ian.ambrose where’s the harassment in his comment? people be taking up any chance to use these words in every convo nowadays even if the words aren’t fit 🤦🏽♀️
Professor Organic Chemistry Tutor, thank you for explaining the Full Version of Rolle's Theorem in Calculus One. This is one of the important Theorems in Calculus. This is an error free video/lecture on TH-cam TV with the Organic Chemistry Tutor.
If i knew there were great teaching videos like this before my exams i'd have probably scored well . My teachers are so dumb and their classes were soo boring .I didnt learned a bit of anything from their dumb classes.I wish i'd more time to learn from these videos😭😭
Hey, this video is old. Rolle's theorem doesn't work like that anymore. I was shocked when I found out Rolle's Theorem doesn't work anymore. I think it has something to do with South Korea and the bombing that happened in 2025 in Feb.
I wanna clarify a thing @ 3:41 we can also say that multiple number of tangents can be drawn at point "c" hence there is no unique tangent at that point so can we say f(x) is not differentiable at c?
The question is, are we supposed to know how to automatically graph these functions to determine whether the function is continuous or not ?? If so how do I learn that ??
I don't know if I understood your question right, but certain families of functions are *always* continuous for any point in their domain. Polynomial functions are always continuous, since they are defined in (-infty, +infty). Rational functions of the form p(x)/q(x) are continuous everywhere except for any x that gives q(x) = 0. Trigonometric functions are continuous everywhere in their domains. Furthermore, the sine and cosine functions are continuous everywhere. Exponential and logarithmic functions, afaik, are also continuous everywhere in their domains. What this entails is that you *don't* always have to graph functions to find out whether they are continuous. You can just recall the domain of the function in question to discuss its continuity.
Your notation for differentiability, at the start, seems quite brave. I'd like to borrow it but I don't think I understand it. How did you come by it? Is it a stand in for a sort of, non strictly, non abelian sequence? I've never seen an ordered pair used that way before.
Rolles state that there would be at least 1 point c where slope is 0 since y=1 is a straight line, infinite number of points are there where slope is 0 hence rolles theorem hold true
Just give any X (like... -1, 0, 1... ) value and calculate the Y value for X. Now you have Xand Y values which is written in form (X, Y) and plot this point in graph and do the same for other points by giving different values for X
Derivative Applications - Formula Sheet: bit.ly/4eV6r1b
Final Exams and Video Playlists: www.video-tutor.net/
Next Video: th-cam.com/video/SL2RobwU_M4/w-d-xo.html
Can you please do a video on successive derivatives which don't include numbers. E.g find the nth derivative of Sin(ax+b)😢.
2 years later, you still are the light and salt for my maths exams
Did u fail your exam?
@Su Hyeon kim From where are u?
4 years later for me
What do you mean by light and salt?
@@computerlover9290 salt and light means if you light on a salt the salt brighten like this the teacher is brighten to the student
As I've always said, TH-cam should take its hat off before this guy and awards him as TEACHER OF HUMANITY. And gives him ALL HE WANTS: a house, money, etc.....
watching this while doing my makeup before my exam. you’re the best :)
did you get a good degree ?
It's so MUCH useful to my self-studying calculus !!! Thank you you filling my COVID-19 time to become better!
How are you?? I'm from Iraq and I didn't understand this Roll can you give me some informatoion about this
@@ian.ambrose bro chill he’s just asking a question. and he obviously means Rolle’s therom
@@ian.ambrose calm down dumbass
@@ian.ambrose where’s the harassment in his comment? people be taking up any chance to use these words in every convo nowadays even if the words aren’t fit 🤦🏽♀️
@@amjidahmed2399
هاي شنو حسبالي بس اني عراقي هنا
Tommorow is my exam , and it's so helpful , thanks alot Mr organic chemistry 😊
how was your exam?
Prince Equalizer I got an A in calculus .
@@frontback4574 hey, how's your studies going now?
@@mujtabahussain7015 They're almost done and going well , preparing for my last semester exams now and hope to graduate this year.
@@frontback4574 all the best for your future exams😊😊
started watching you in 8th grade for y=mx+b problems, doing calculus now and youre still clutch
Professor Organic Chemistry Tutor, thank you for explaining the Full Version of Rolle's Theorem in Calculus One. This is one of the important Theorems in Calculus. This is an error free video/lecture on TH-cam TV with the Organic Chemistry Tutor.
Never seen a teacher who is good as he is 😶 thanks
wish me luck for my exams 🖤
so how did the exam go LOL
aCha bhaiyaGG
Hie you guys alive?
No intros no outro no rubbish gossips. Bro just came, taught what universities couldn't and disappeared. 🗿✨
Even my university teachers couldn’t teach me like this. God bless you bro!
there has never a time that this channel helped me with my college journey
YOu have just explained in 60 minutes what I have been struggling with for weeks. (I watched your other videos.) Thank you!!!!!
In calculus rn. This literally made me understand my teachers 30 min lecture in 6 mins….
Every time I see In
I read it as natural log as upper case I and lowercase l look same
I l
You tell me which is which...
Thank you so much! You explain Rolle's theorem really clearly. I have also recommended my friends to review the theorem by learning from your video.
5 years later and bro always come through🙏
How do you manage to explain in 20 minutes what my calculous teacher cant explain in an hour?
i got an A minus in my calculus 1 course because of you. Now I'm in calculus with the same hope of you guiding me in this darkness.
6 years later and bro is still carrying our degrees 🙏
Just completed 4 weeks of lecture content in 1 day with your videos😭
Thank you so much for these videos they’re still very helpful today!
Thank you so much for this!!
I missed some of my classes because I was tested positive and obviously I had to take a break. But this really helped me!
This man, he’s like a gift from God
i learned so much in 20 mins from this video than i did in the 1 hour i spent crying over my professors calc notes
I love studying mathematics in Chemistry Class. That's exactly what I do in normal classrooms...
Do you like studying physics, mechanics (subcategory of physics), biology and SAT practice problems? He does that also.
@@marcusvergara6193 Yes and he's best in all of them.
Seriously your way of teaching is tooo good
Thank you very much! Your explanations are so thorough!
If i knew there were great teaching videos like this before my exams i'd have probably scored well . My teachers are so dumb and their classes were soo boring .I didnt learned a bit of anything from their dumb classes.I wish i'd more time to learn from these videos😭😭
Hey, this video is old. Rolle's theorem doesn't work like that anymore. I was shocked when I found out Rolle's Theorem doesn't work anymore. I think it has something to do with South Korea and the bombing that happened in 2025 in Feb.
@@deliveringIdeas lol
I wanna clarify a thing @ 3:41 we can also say that multiple number of tangents can be drawn at point "c" hence there is no unique tangent at that point so can we say f(x) is not differentiable at c?
you can't have more than one tangent at a point on a curve
Have a 3 percent in calc rn thank you so much dawg!
Lol
Thank you so much sir!
Even before watching this video i am sure that this video is going to be awesome...:)
Thank you from Poland!
Today is my exam and I'm here thanks buddy 💗
thank you soo much after every lecture im here and make clear wht i`ve learn
thank you sooo much! you just saved my student life.
it was so helpful though im a korean student!! ur better than my teacher
Bro you always save my life
why continuous on [a,b] ? why not continuous on (a,b)? and why differentiable on (a,b)? why not differentiable on [a,b]?
please 🙏 explain
Great video like always! Thank you for the help.
Love you bro you're light to Many. ❣️❣️🤝🏻
thanks fo this video its very useful to me , its help me study a lot
If it was up to me, you'd most definitely receive all of my tuition
0:39, ok, set up, but who is setting it up?
who said u will be my savior in everything physic chemistry algebra analysis statistics probability like damn ur gorgeous sir 🫡
at 11:19 for the function x*sqrt(4-x), what if the interval is not [0,4] but [0,5]? How can we plot the graph for the complex part?
It wouldn't satisfy Rolle's Theorem since f(0) =/= f(5)
Series will be more helpful if you will upload videos on - what is continuity and differentibility. And what are their conditions.
Your Disciple.
hes organic chem, people should know that early calculus before watching this
@@winstonava1 this is early calculus he doesn't just do orgo.
15:29 was a jumpscare 💀, lovely video though
@ 2:02 Yeah we can C where it is... lol
haha....so how are you doing after two years Tihomotse Moteme
How are you doing 3 later?@@sarangabbasi2560
9:34 how do you know the graph looks like that? Also at 11:18. Can you just use a graphing calculator on tests?
You are really great, sir ☺️. Thanks a lot 🥹❤️
Outstanding to concept clear.
OMG i have no words for u thank u so so much🙏🙏
At 11:30 mins
How those kind of graphs drwan just from the equation?
Can anyone help me with it
is graphing the function the only way to tell whether it’s diff or cont ?
I also wonder
this man is lengend
The question is, are we supposed to know how to automatically graph these functions to determine whether the function is continuous or not ?? If so how do I learn that ??
I don't know if I understood your question right, but certain families of functions are *always* continuous for any point in their domain.
Polynomial functions are always continuous, since they are defined in (-infty, +infty).
Rational functions of the form p(x)/q(x) are continuous everywhere except for any x that gives q(x) = 0.
Trigonometric functions are continuous everywhere in their domains. Furthermore, the sine and cosine functions are continuous everywhere.
Exponential and logarithmic functions, afaik, are also continuous everywhere in their domains.
What this entails is that you *don't* always have to graph functions to find out whether they are continuous. You can just recall the domain of the function in question to discuss its continuity.
Its supposed to be continuos on the closed interval and differentiable on the open one.
yeah exactly you are right my dear
Why u saying that?
But that is what mentioned in the video too.
15:28 i was very confused, i thought my computer was yelling at me
13:09 [0, 4] should not be differentiable
It's not cuz 4 isn't differentiable. However the theorem states that the function should be differentiable on the open interval (0, 4) and it is.
tomorrow we have M1 exam ....... It's very useful for us
Well i don't have M1 tmrw but I do have my CIA 1 tmrw ,😢
why is ur name organic chenm when ur teaching maths? luv the video and all, just curious
Why does it have to be open intervals for differentiability conditions and not the case of continuity.
Because it doesn't matter the points before a and after b
Sorry, i have a question about how to distinguish is the equation is differentiable or not😢
And what if there is no interval is given
And we have find interval also.
Your notation for differentiability, at the start, seems quite brave. I'd like to borrow it but I don't think I understand it. How did you come by it? Is it a stand in for a sort of, non strictly, non abelian sequence? I've never seen an ordered pair used that way before.
Soo....a fraction as an exponent will create a cusp?? Thus making it not differentiable?
u saved my life
Best video I ever sawww
How did you directly know the graph???😢
My cousin put me on to you… THANK GOD
bro how could u draw the graph by seeing the eqn !!!
please teach us budans theorem
why doesn't f(x) have to be differentiable on the closed interval and only on the open interval?
Did u get the ans?
thank you so much God bless you!
How the second curve not differential on (a b). Can you elaborate more sir🤔
can you apply this on any question
thank you so much....
sry sir i have one why you are take +5 for f'(x) sir
Thanks king❣️
Which application you use for making this video
Plz reply....thanks
47 seconds in but I like it already
how to make graphs from those equations????
How to know this function is continuous at [0,5] interval?
Because F(x) is just a regular polynomial equation
Use intermidiate value theorem
How i can sketch all type of graph ?
Why did you multiply by 2 ?
What if the equation is y=1?
Rolles state that there would be at least 1 point c where slope is 0 since y=1 is a straight line, infinite number of points are there where slope is 0 hence rolles theorem hold true
how we will get to know which graph will be made for which function?
Just give any X (like... -1, 0, 1... ) value and calculate the Y value for X. Now you have Xand Y values which is written in form (X, Y) and plot this point in graph and do the same for other points by giving different values for X
Thank u sir 😊
awesome video
Bro is Goated
Would've been better if you derived the functions to find if they were differentiable instead of just showing the graph. Great vid anyways :)
Where does 2x_5 come from?
Lots or love from Pakistan
Very helpful
teach me sensei how do you draw a graph just by looking at the equation 😭
"You see that point is c"
yas
S
15:29 lmfaoooo scared the hell out of me
Why is ur name the organic chemistry ?
because he teaches chemistry also
At 11:33 how do we know the graph of that particular function
graph it nigga
Why f(a)=f(b) ??
f(a) and f(b) represent the y values for x=a and x=b respectively. Since the y value of x=a is the same as x=b, you can say that f(a)=f(b)