Toronto Math Forum
APM346-2012 => APM346 Math => Home Assignment 5 => Topic started by: Aida Razi on October 31, 2012, 09:31:34 PM
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Part (a) solution is attached!
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WTH you are bringing me from textbook the plots of the partial sums of the FS on the given interval rather than the complete sum on $(-\infty,\infty)$ which is due to continuation?
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WTH you are bringing me from textbook the plots of the partial sums of the FS on the given interval rather than the complete sum on $(-\infty,\infty)$ which is due to continuation?
Professor Ivrii,
The interval is [0,Ï€]!
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WTH you are bringing me from textbook the plots of the partial sums of the FS on the given interval rather than the complete sum on $(-\infty,\infty)$ which is due to continuation?
Professor Ivrii,
The interval is [0,Ï€]!
But F.s. converges everywhere!
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WTH you are bringing me from textbook the plots of the partial sums of the FS on the given interval rather than the complete sum on $(-\infty,\infty)$ which is due to continuation?
Professor Ivrii,
The interval is [0,Ï€]!
But F.s. converges everywhere!
Yes, I got it.
I am sorry,