You don't memorize reactions. Also, I'm not sure whether you should memorize the electrode potentials table (I, for one, do not). I just have a vague feeling about some oxidants being "strong" and the others "weak", and that's enough for most situations. — Ivan Neretin5 mins ago
"You don't memorize reactions" - the single most preposterous statement about chemistry that I know thus far. For some reason I see it repeated by different people.
I'm slowly going through the Problem 37 sample questions of the Russian USE exam.
user116211
Hmm... you just need to know a bit abstract algebra and finite-dimensional vector spaces and their properties; the book is more or less self-contained and very intuitive.
@Shadock Probably you will have to make one because there are way to many possibilities … Otherwise, the Hollemann-Wiberg is always a good starting point.
@Hippalectryon Pretty much. Enter sample, read value. So far the theory. In practice: Read 20 values, average them.
Having a solvent mixture with high isohexane content for easier evaporation, a fast column, capturing ten fractions only, deducting the time for packing the column, knowing where the spot is, being a tad too polar with my eluents and faking a lot of other statistics ;)
We just did a major revamp of how badges are awarded behind the scenes to drastically reduce the load on SQL Server. It now takes advantage of some pre-compute work we're doing to track badge progress in the profile.
However, I screwed up 2 queries, specifically the text names of the badges that...