This is the official homepage for MAT327 at the University of Toronto for the summer 2019 term.
All course information other than grades will be posted here and only here.
If you're here because you're curious about how I run this course, please visit my "generic" version of this site for further information.
This website was statically generated from Markdown files by a simple python script I wrote some time ago. It's not fancy, but it gets the job done.
(All course announcements that were here have been moved to the older announcements page. All quizzes, tests, and their solutions are now hidden.)
This information is contained in the syllabus. It is reproduced here for your convenience.
Ivan Khatchatourian is the course coordinator.
Lectures: W1-3 and F12 in MP137.
Office hours with Ivan: W4 and R1-3
All office hours will take place in HU1018. If you cannot make any of these times, contact me by email and arrange a meeting at a mutually convenient time.
Things You Should Know
This document lists some of the basic concepts with which students entering this course are assumed to be familiar.
It was suggested that for each lecture I post a short summary of what chapters/sections of my notes are covered in each lecture. This is a great idea, so I'll start doing that here. I'll also be posting any in-class notes from students who wish to make them available for the benefit of other students. I have a tendency to say a lot of things that I don't write on the board in class, so in-class notes may be very valuable.
DISCLAIMER: The in-class notes made by students and published here are the work of students. I have not edited them in detail for mathematical accuracy or style.
Any students who are willing to have their notes posted publicly should email them to me as a PDF (one PDF per lecture) and include the date of the lecture. Also mention if you're willing to have your name posted with them (you may post them anonymously). I am willing to post handwritten notes provided they are neat, legible, and scanned/photographed well. In particular, your notes do not have to be typed, but if they are typed it must be with LaTeX and your notation must agree with the notation of my notes (\mathcal{T}
for a topology, etc.).