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==Description==
Where the solution curve is concave up, its tangent line will underestimate the vertical coordinate of the next point and vice versa for a concave down solution. The ideal prediction line would hit the curve at its next predicted point. In reality, there is no way to know whether the solution is concave-up or concave-down, and hence if the next predicted point will overestimate or underestimate its vertical value. The concavity of the curve cannot be guaranteed to remain consistent either and the prediction may overestimate and underestimate at different points in the ___domain of the solution.
<ref>{{cite web
|title=Numerical Methods for Solving Differential Equations
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|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090212005921/http://calculuslab.deltacollege.edu/ODE/7-C-2/7-C-2-h.html
|archivedate=2009-02-12}}</ref>
The points along the tangent line of the left end point have vertical coordinates which all underestimate those that lie on the solution curve, including the right end point of the interval under consideration. The solution is to make the slope greater by some amount.
[[File:Heun's Method Diagram.jpg|thumb|right|alt=Heun's Method.|A diagram depicting the use of Heun's method to find a less erroneous prediction when compared to the lower order Euler's Method]]
{{Citation | last1=Chen
| first1=Wenfang.
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