- #1
bjnartowt
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"Undergraduate" or "beginning" mathematical methods book?
Hi everyone, I'd like to know your recommendations for an "introductory" mathematical methods book. I have a book by Frederick Byron and Robert Fuller...that's a good book, but it seems suited for the grad level. I'm looking for the "Griffiths" amidst mathematical methods books, if that makes any sense. You know, the "introductory" text that would be used at a junior or senior undergrad level. Is Mary Boas's text one such introductory text?
It's going to help organise my big bibliography of sources I use when typing out my own notes and, in following the advice of a prof. I'm doing research for (yay!), reading *multiple* books on a single topic.
: ) thanks : )
Hi everyone, I'd like to know your recommendations for an "introductory" mathematical methods book. I have a book by Frederick Byron and Robert Fuller...that's a good book, but it seems suited for the grad level. I'm looking for the "Griffiths" amidst mathematical methods books, if that makes any sense. You know, the "introductory" text that would be used at a junior or senior undergrad level. Is Mary Boas's text one such introductory text?
It's going to help organise my big bibliography of sources I use when typing out my own notes and, in following the advice of a prof. I'm doing research for (yay!), reading *multiple* books on a single topic.
: ) thanks : )