At 20 dollars a pop usually, shouldn't they proofread what they publish? OK, in a textbook is a wrong Binomial Probability Distribution formula. Has anyone seen this phenomenon?
I think it's ridiculous. You know how much it throws people off? 
Try a computer science professor who doesn't proof read what he puts up on the slides. I mean, countless times, the guy has been corrected by a genius kid in my class. haha.
I'll take a guess and say it has something to do with money most likely. They want to get the most profit out of the book and I suppose hiring proofreaders would take away from the profit they would make off of selling the books. You really can't proofread your own work as people tend to have a tendency for unconsciously ignoring errors they have made in their work because their mind automatically reads it correctly so they never spot it themselves at least with typographical errors. There is also an issue with the length of the book as that probably played a role in missing the errors even if they did proofread it beforehand as a math book would likely be quite lengthy.The person writing the book, himself or herself, should proofread it. It wouldn't take much time. Why won't they even bother to do that?
They want to get the most profit out of the book and I suppose hiring proofreaders would take away from the profit they would make off of selling the books.
There is also an issue with the length of the book as that probably played a role in missing the errors even if they did proofread it beforehand as a math book would likely be quite lengthy.
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