Mostly in Calc III you deal with them, not so much in Calc II and none in Calc I
Chat with our AI personalities
It is certainly used in calculus, just as calculus can be used in trigonometry.
Anti-derivatives are a part of the integrals in the calculus field. According to the site Chegg, it is best described as the "inverse operation of differentiation."
Maybe you mean connics? Conics are shape of graphs. They get their name because they are all parts of a cone sliced in different directions. Some examples are lines, parabolas, hyperbolas, circles, ellipses, points...
Calculus is made up of Trig and Algebra. Most people you ask will say that the hardest part of calculus is the algebra. The best advice I can give is to know your unit circle and Pythagoreans Theorem well.
Calculus; by a long shot.