This page covers Pre-Calculus at the AP / College Prep level, delivered as a formula cheat sheet. Limits, function analysis, polar coordinates, vectors, and parametric equations. The final stepping . The material here corresponds to Grades 11–12 courses: AP Calculus AB and AP Calculus BC.
The key formulas for Pre-Calculus at the AP / College Prep level are organised below. Each formula is accompanied by a note on when it applies and what common variations exist.
The skills covered by these formulas are: Function analysis, Limits (intuitive), Polar coordinates, Vectors, Parametric equations.
For each formula, read the conditions carefully. Many errors in Pre-Calculus come from applying a formula outside its domain of validity — using a geometric formula that assumes a right angle when the angle is not specified, or applying a probability rule that requires independence when the events are dependent.
Use this sheet as a revision tool after you have worked through problems — not as a first introduction to the material. A formula you have derived or used is one you will remember; a formula you have only read is one you will forget under exam pressure.
Worked Example
A standard pre calculus problem at the ap college prep level.
Work through step by step: identify what is given, what is asked, apply the relevant technique, and check your answer against the original conditions.
Treating the inverse function notation f⁻¹(x) as meaning 1/f(x). These are different: f⁻¹ is the inverse function, not the reciprocal.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is Pre-Calculus different at the AP / College Prep level compared to earlier levels?
At the AP / College Prep level, Pre-Calculus builds on Grades 11–12 prerequisites. Students are expected to have completed AP Calculus AB before tackling this material.
Which exams test Pre-Calculus at this level?
AP Precalculus, SAT Subject Math 2, College placement tests.
What is the single most effective way to practise Pre-Calculus for AP / College Prep students?
The most effective practice at the AP / College Prep level is deliberate work on novel problem setups — not repeated drilling of the same template. Attempt problems before looking at solutions, and review errors by identifying the specific step where the reasoning broke down.