Statistics Book: Find a Level & Theory Equivalent to Stewart Calculus

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The discussion centers on the search for a statistics book comparable to Stewart's calculus texts in terms of depth and theoretical understanding. A participant expresses dissatisfaction with available statistics books, labeling many as inadequate. They mention using "A First Course in Probability" by Sheldon Ross, which they found to be clear and engaging, despite its focus on probability rather than statistics. Another contributor emphasizes that a solid understanding of statistics inherently involves learning probability, arguing that statistics is fundamentally based on probability concepts. The conversation highlights the challenge of finding a quality statistics resource that balances theory and accessibility.
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Is there a good statistics book that is the equivalent of Stewart for Calculus in terms of level and theory?

I am probably going to retake stat in the math department at some point (or not), but want to know if such a book exists. By and large, the stat books I have thumbed through are garbage.
 
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go with a book on probability, that's the theory behind statistics
 
A Primer to Probability
 
Probability? I don't want probability.
 
I took a statistics class last year and we covered a lot of things from really basic stuff to some mind-boggling intense stuff. The textbook that we used for our class was [bold]A First Course in Probability[/bold] by [bold]Sheldon Ross[/bold] (don't mind the name, its actually a book on statistics ). I haven't looked at a lot of statistics books, but I seriously loved this book. Very clear and concise. It is one of those books that you might actually feel like reading.
 
cyrusabdollahi said:
Probability? I don't want probability.

Umm, you expect to learn statistics without learning probability? Statistics IS probability, at least the non-grabage part is.
 
I'm looking at a book called python crash course for beginners (eric mathes), does anyone have experience of using this book or any other book that you would recommend for learning python if not that, is there a specific course you'd suggest that isn't in book form? I'm completely new to programming if it helps. So i need a gameplan for learning it quite quickly for my undergrad studies

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