Mathematics
Nerds
Mathematics Subreddit Analytics
Mathematics is a Nerds topic covering 13 Reddit communities with 8,017,791 combined members. Use this page to compare top Mathematics subreddits, track daily and weekly growth, and find related communities for research, marketing, or audience discovery.
Mathematics communities currently show ↗ +0.07% average daily growth and ↗ +0.34% average weekly growth across tracked subreddits. Net tracked movement is +2,368 members today and +10,072 members this week .
Popular Mathematics Reddit communities include r/math, r/theydidthemath, r/mathmemes, r/learnmath, r/askmath.
Topic Overview
Daily Growth Chart (30 days)
Top Mathematics Subreddits (13)
r/math
This subreddit is for discussion of mathematics. All posts and comments should be directly related to mathematics, including topics related to the practice, profession and community of mathematics.
r/theydidthemath
And they said math has no real world applications
r/mathmemes
Give me some mathematical memes!
r/learnmath
Post all of your math-learning resources here. Questions, no matter how basic, will be answered (to the best ability of the online subscribers).
r/askmath
This subreddit is for questions of a mathematical nature. Please read the subreddit rules below before posting.
r/calculus
Welcome to r/calculus - a space for learning calculus and related disciplines. Remember to read the rules before posting and flair your posts appropriately.
r/GeometryIsNeat
r/geometryisneat - A place where you can post neat pictures of geometry. It can be anything geometric or aesthetically pleasing!
r/desmos
A subreddit dedicated to sharing graphs created using the Desmos graphing calculator. Feel free to post demonstrations of interesting mathematical phenomena, questions about what is happening in a graph, or just cool things you've found while playing with the calculator. Reply to people with commands! For example, "!fp" explains what floating point arithmetic is. Try out commands at https://redd.it/1ixvsgi
r/fractals
"A fractal is a way of seeing infinity." ― Benoit B. Mandelbrot
r/DePi
π ist ungefähr drei. g ist ungefähr 10
r/trigonometry
r/Trigonometry is a place for the discussion of trigonometry and its applications. Homework questions are allowed for the sake of learning, but please don't ask others to do all of your work for you. All content should be in English. Be civil, respectful, and follow the Reddiquette. Remember that the rules of reddit are also still in effect.
r/DifferentialEquations
After you've gone through Calc I, II, and III (and maybe even Calc IV), you enter the more practical math world of Differential Equations. This subreddit is different from our sister sub, r/Calculus in our focus purely on Differential Equations and solving them. Ask questions, propose ideas, and get help with your Diff. Eq. homework here.
r/math
This subreddit is for discussion of mathematics. All posts and comments should be directly related to mathematics, including topics related to the practice, profession and community of mathematics.
r/learnmath
Post all of your math-learning resources here. Questions, no matter how basic, will be answered (to the best ability of the online subscribers).
r/askmath
This subreddit is for questions of a mathematical nature. Please read the subreddit rules below before posting.
r/calculus
Welcome to r/calculus - a space for learning calculus and related disciplines. Remember to read the rules before posting and flair your posts appropriately.
r/GeometryIsNeat
r/geometryisneat - A place where you can post neat pictures of geometry. It can be anything geometric or aesthetically pleasing!
r/desmos
A subreddit dedicated to sharing graphs created using the Desmos graphing calculator. Feel free to post demonstrations of interesting mathematical phenomena, questions about what is happening in a graph, or just cool things you've found while playing with the calculator. Reply to people with commands! For example, "!fp" explains what floating point arithmetic is. Try out commands at https://redd.it/1ixvsgi
r/trigonometry
r/Trigonometry is a place for the discussion of trigonometry and its applications. Homework questions are allowed for the sake of learning, but please don't ask others to do all of your work for you. All content should be in English. Be civil, respectful, and follow the Reddiquette. Remember that the rules of reddit are also still in effect.
r/DifferentialEquations
After you've gone through Calc I, II, and III (and maybe even Calc IV), you enter the more practical math world of Differential Equations. This subreddit is different from our sister sub, r/Calculus in our focus purely on Differential Equations and solving them. Ask questions, propose ideas, and get help with your Diff. Eq. homework here.