It is applied math. Math is the purest form there is. psychology is applied biology, which is applied chemistry, which is applied physics, which is applied math, which is pure PURE
the maths for nda kaduna is pure maths.
Yes
Math is a language not a science. Better stated Math is a pure language. In addition, math is used to model a science and eventually draw conclusion from it.
It is gambling and pure luck! If it was pure math, you can bet there would be some very rich mathematicians walking around!
It depends on what you want from it.
A bank teller applies math in the performance of their job, they do not concern themselves with pure math; therefore a bank teller's job would fall under a classification of using applied math.
Yes.
Pure-FTPd is a free FTP Server that runs on multiple platforms.
Pure math is done as a kind of art, similar to music, without any concern about how the results may apply to science or daily life. The major concern is how the results improve on other math. Pure math is only concerned with improving upon itself. Pure Mathematicians are master in Mathematics. Applied math relates to other things. It is math used to help advance science, engineering, or other fields that are not related to just math. Applied mathematicians are well equiped in every related branches of science where mathematics is used thus they are "jack of all trades but master of none".
Pure math is always correct w/o error. Pure math delves into the realm of theory and generality. For example, the equation 3x+5=72. This is asking you to solve a very specific equation where x has one value and is very restricted in R^1. A pure math problem would ask you to prove integration by parts for all R^n, and even then, only as an undergrad. Applied math, on the other hand cares more about the real world and modeling. You might be asked to generate a graph based off of data or solve a very specific differential equation. However, applied math can only improve with the advancement of pure math. I.E. pure mathematicians create the patterns, rules, and tools of the trade while applied mathematicians take them out of theory and into practice.
yes