Sin, cos, and tan were an absolute pain in the ass during math class, really just trigonometry in general. Really, why did we even have to learn those? Outside of structural engineering or something, you'll basically never use trigonometry.
Sin, cos, and tan were an absolute pain in the ass during math class, really just trigonometry in general. Really, why did we even have to learn those? Outside of structural engineering or something, you'll basically never use trigonometry.
Sin, cos, and tan were an absolute pain in the ass during math class, really just trigonometry in general. Really, why did we even have to learn those? Outside of structural engineering or something, you'll basically never use trigonometry.
Trig destroyed my soul. I literally went cross-eyed anytime I had to do any work with it. I struggled through but it was not a pleasant experience.
Sin, cos, and tan were an absolute pain in the ass during math class, really just trigonometry in general. Really, why did we even have to learn those? Outside of structural engineering or something, you'll basically never use trigonometry.
It's a prerequisite for calculus which is required for all STEM fields.
Trig itself also pops up pretty often whenever vectors, angles, distances, area/volume and cycles are involved. So deffo in physics, most fields of engineering. some fields of chemistry and biology, and other stuff like computer graphics. Actually using trig might not be that common in everyday work, but a lot of the principles and tools used are built on trig and other foundations so it's a required subject before moving into those fields.
We move now into a digital word that has more triangles than 2D assets. Good building even in Minecraft requires trigonometry, you should never skip your math classes.
NNescio said: It's a prerequisite for calculus which is required for all STEM fields.
Trig itself also pops up pretty often whenever vectors, angles, distances, area/volume and cycles are involved. So deffo in physics, most fields of engineering. some fields of chemistry and biology, and other stuff like computer graphics. Actually using trig might not be that common in everyday work, but a lot of the principles and tools used are built on trig and other foundations so it's a required subject before moving into those fields.
Huh, did not expect to be lectured on the importance of trigonometry on Danbooru of all places. I mean fair enough, math class is very important to everyday life. Guess trig does have its uses after all…