Handbook of Algebra
We hope that this book sets up a standard of what all algebraists are supposed to know in "their" chapters; interested people from other areas should be able to get a quick idea about the area.
H. Hasse, Uber die Normenreste eines relativ-zyklischen Körpers vom Primzahlgrad l nach Einem Primteiler [ von l, Math. Ann. 90 (1923), 262-278. H. Hasse, Das allgemeine Reziprozitätsgesetz ...
This edition continues to encompass the fundamentals of linear algebra, combinatorial and numerical linear algebra, and applications of linear algebra to various disciplines while also covering up-to-date software packages for linear ...
[6] R.J.R. Back, Refinement calculus, Part I: Sequential nondeterministic programs, REX Workshop, Stepwise Refinement of Distributed Systems, Lecture Notes in Comput. Sci. 430, J.W. de Bakker, W.-P. de Roever and G. Rozenberg, eds, ...
Provides a succinct, but thorough treatment of algebra. In a collection that spans about 150 sections, organized in 9 chapters, algebraists are provided with a standard knowledge set for their areas of expertise.
In Burmeister, P., editor, Universal Algebra and its Links with Logic, Algebra, Combinatorics and Computer Science, Proceedings of the 25. Arbeitstagung über Allgemeine Algebra, Darmstadt 1983, volume 4 of Research and Expositions in ...
M. Barr, C. Wells, Category theory for computing science, Prentice Hall, 1990 J. Bell, M. Machover, A course in mathematical logic, North Holland, 1977 J. Bénabou, Critères de représentabilité des foncteurs, Comptes Rendus de l'Académie ...
Where possible, attention is drawn to those occasions where various authors ascribe different meanings to the same term. The handbook will be extremely useful to students for revision purposes.
In 1996, the bestselling first edition of the Handbook of Computer Vision Algorithms in Image Algebra introduced engineers, scientists, and students to this powerful tool, its basic concepts, and its use in the concise representation
Intended as a self-study guide for advanced undergraduates and beginning graduatestudents in mathematics and a reference for more advanced mathematicians, this highly readable book provides broader coverage than competing texts in the area.