Hello~It's me. again... 
This is the explanation of population growth in my textbook and I don't get it... 
I don't know what n represents (the textbook doesn't specify)
and because I don't know that, I don't know what I'm looking at right now 
I also attached example 9 they were talking about if that will help
Could someone please help me?
n represents the amount of compounds each year.
Think of it this way - in each example, you could add up each percentage over the year to get 24%. However, you got different results because each time you compounded more frequently. In this case, the population growth over one year is given by:
^n)
Let's try this formula out on the three examples:
n=1:
^1=1000(1.24))
n=2:
}\right)^2=1000(1.12)^2)
n=12:
}\right)^{12}=1000(1.02)^{12})
And so we see that the formula works!
However, only compounding occasionally for population growth is incredibly stupid. I mean, think about it - are you going to just say to people, "okay, you can only have sex every 2 months, so we can get this inconsequential mathematical model done"? No, that's stupid - people will continue to reproduce at all times. And so, we need to be compounding constantly - think of it as compounding an infinite amount of times within a year.
The best way to represent this is to take our amount of compounds (n), and see what happens as it goes to infinity, which is where your book kicks in.