home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: sci.math.symbolic
- Path: sparky!uunet!nntp.telebit.com!phr
- From: phr@telebit.com (Paul Rubin)
- Subject: Re: Novice asks for symbolic math suggestions...
- In-Reply-To: mek@guinan.psu.edu's message of Tue, 12 Jan 93 20:41:16 GMT
- Message-ID: <PHR.93Jan12185848@napa.telebit.com>
- Sender: news@telebit.com
- Nntp-Posting-Host: napa
- Organization: Telebit Corporation; Sunnyvale, CA, USA
- References: <lestrade.726863807@Ra.MsState.Edu> <ie81H*p=_b@atlantis.psu.edu>
- Date: Wed, 13 Jan 1993 02:58:48 GMT
- Lines: 28
-
- In article <ie81H*p=_b@atlantis.psu.edu> mek@guinan.psu.edu (Mark E. Kotanchek) writes:
-
- In article <lestrade.726863807@Ra.MsState.Edu> lestrade@Ra.MsState.Edu
- (John Patrick Lestrade) writes:
- > ok, assume i am computer literate and math literate and I am a late
- > comer to symbolic math packages. is there a consensus of opinion as to
- > which package i should buy: mathematica, maple, axiom (i just saw a book
- > in the bookstore for Axiom -- is it a viable contender?) and if
- > mathematica is the best, which book should I buy.
-
- If you opt for Mathematica, buy ALL the books as the on-line help is
- worthless--IMHO, based upon experiences with Mathematica 2.1 on my
- NeXTstation--unless you are already aware of the existence of the command.
-
- If you opt for Mathematica, the essential book is "Mathematica Quick
- Reference, Version 2" by Nancy Blachman which summarizes all of the
- commands and their options.
-
- I got by ok with just the Mathematica textbook that comes with
- Mathematica, but you probably have to be an experienced programmer to
- understand it. The Quick Reference book is quite handy though again
- most of the info is in the main manual.
-
- If you just want to get started playing with symbolic math programs
- and don't need something super high powered,
- try the Emacs calculator calc.el (ftp from prep.ai.mit.edu:
- pub/gnu/calc-2.02.tar.Z, plus you need GNU Emacs). It's free and
- amazing.
-