slugtypestatuscategorysummarydatetagspasswordicon Taylor seriesTaylor seriesIn mathematics, the Taylor series or Taylor expansion of a function is an infinite sum of terms that are expressed in terms of the function's derivatives at a single point. For most common functions, the function and the sum of its Taylor series are equal near this point. Taylor series are named after Brook Taylor, who introduced them in 1715. A Taylor series is also called a Maclaurin series when 0 is the point where the derivatives are considered, after Colin Maclaurin, who made extensive use of this special case of Taylor series in the 18th century.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taylor_series#References Intuition for Taylor Series (DNA Analogy) – BetterExplainedYour body has a strange property: you can learn information about the entire organism from a single cell. Pick a cell, dive into the nucleus, and extract the DNA. You can now regrow the entire creature from that tiny sample.https://betterexplained.com/articles/taylor-series/ 作者:现代数学启蒙链接:https://www.math1234567.com/taylorseries声明:本文采用 CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 许可协议,转载请注明出处。相关文章Chapter 9: Inferential StatisticsChapter 10: Chi-squared TestsChapter 11: Non-parametric testsChapter 12: Probability Generating FunctionsChapter 13:ProjectilesChapter 14:Equilibrium of a rigid bodyCIE 9709 P1视频讲解MAT Resources