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Is this book something a high school student could understand? I have no experience with calculus...
neurocomp2003 said:do you plan on going into computational sciences in physics/chemistry/biology/math
if so i suggest picking up a "Numerical Recipes in" C/C++/Fortran...Just to get started on your numericals engine earlier. If you just want to do theory then I would wait for university plus that book is really OLD.
I suggest picking up "computational Beauty of Nature" Gary Flake
or a University INtro to Calc text firsT(ie James Stewart) or some newer Mathphys book
Thanks for that link! I had been wanting to get a copy of this book but I didn't realize a new edition was coming out. If anyone has the new edition, please let us know how it compares to the previous editions.robphy said:The third edition of Boas (2005) is available now.
http://eu.he.wiley.com/WileyCDA/HigherEdTitle/productCd-0471365807,courseListingNavId-108318,pageType-copy,page-collegeEdNotes.html
neurocomp2003 said:zapperz: my post implied merely that if he were wanting to pick up a book NOW that perhaps that book is not best suited for him (because it is rather old so would use terminology that he would not understood...and i did glance at the book) you yourself said that it was aimed for people in 2nd-3rd year university. Also there are some books today that not only give theory but also code(Landau & Paez) I think a lot of science students today should have programming as a skill.
jma2001 said:Thanks for that link! I had been wanting to get a copy of this book but I didn't realize a new edition was coming out. If anyone has the new edition, please let us know how it compares to the previous editions.
dextercioby said:I think a HS student could handle the first 3 chapters.But if you're not interested in trying (& hopefully succeeding) to become a physicist,then it's no point in adding it to your bookshelf.
It's good.But for college.
Daniel.