I'm slightly confused about how it works with regards to the following out of my textbook;
"If we can consider a solid to be made up of lots of thin discs stacked on top of each other, and then find an expression for the cross-sectional area of each disc, then the volume of each disc is
\times \delta h)
, where
)
is the cross-sectional area at a height

and

is the thickness of the disc"
(I understand all of this fine)
"The total volume of the solid can be found by adding the volumes of all the discs;

sum of all

sum of all
 \times \delta h)
"
(I understand this)
 \times \delta h)
This process can be represented by
dh)
I don't understand this? How does the finite sum

, become an integral of an infinite sum?
Because the summation notation the way they have written it, it indicates a sum of only
)
times, as it increments by 1 from a to b. Doesn't it?
In another textbook I understand how they write it as;
]^2 \Delta x_i)
Because, this can be seen as a Riemann Sum, so as
]^2 dx )
But I don't understand the first textbooks notation?
Thanks
(Sorry for the poorly formatted Latex, I'm not sure how to make in inline on this forum)