Yes.
some algebra, mostly geometry, and a little bit of trig.
Try engineering. That's lot of geometry and algebra.
You can get through many aspects of geometry without pre-algebra or algebra. However, when it comes to the measurement in geometry, you need algebra for that.
It depends on your school, but it is usually Algebra 1, Algebra 2, then Geometry.
Algebra. I took it in that order, and to do most of the geometry, you HAVE to know algebra. If I had taken geometry first, I would have failed. ALGEBRA FIRST.
S. S. Keller has written: 'Mathematics for engineering students' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Algebra, Analytic Geometry, Calculus, Plane trigonometry, Geometry 'Mathematics for engineering students, Analytical geometry and calculus' -- subject(s): Calculus, Analytic Geometry
i believe it is scale drawling Answer: The math used to design an aeroplane is the math of phyics, engineering, electronics and metallurgy - geometry, algebra , trigonometry, calculusThe math used to build the 'plane is - geometry, calculus, algebra
It depends on your school, but it is usually Algebra 1, Algebra 2, then Geometry.
No, geometry is more depth into algebra, with formulas and shapes. That's why algebra is a prerequisite
it goes algebra 1, geometry, then algebra 2
Dude, you should be mastered in computer engineering and computer science, not algebra. That's how I got a job at treyarch.
Rene Descartes was the mathematician that applied algebra to geometry.