a secular response to the religious conflict
Daniel Mocsny
dmocsny at minerva.che.uc.edu
Mon Dec 10 12:07:44 AEST 1990
In article <27304.27610742 at kuhub.cc.ukans.edu> arritt at kuhub.cc.ukans.edu writes:
>One of the frustrations of practicing scientists who are genuinely
>interested in learning about C (or any other potentially useful
>computational technique, for that matter) is that it's difficult to
>get information that is both objective and understandable.
I have been trying to find and study all books which attempt to
present C language programming, or C program examples, to scientists
and engineers who are likely to have a background in FORTRAN. So far,
I have located only the following titles. Would the readers of these
newsgroups kindly recommend others, if any exist? I've already scanned
a few on-line card catalogs, but my list can't be exhaustive.
Press, et al. _Numerical Recipes in C: the Art of Scientific Computing_,
Cambridge University Press 1988.
Kempf, J., _Numerical Software Tools in C_, Prentice-Hall 1987.
Baker, L., _C Tools for Scientists and Engineers_, McGraw-Hill 1989.
Baker, L., _More C Tools for Scientists and Engineers_, McGraw-Hill 1990.
Books specific to particular engineering or scientific disciplines would
also be useful.
--
Dan Mocsny Snail:
Internet: dmocsny at minerva.che.uc.edu Dept. of Chemical Engng. M.L. 171
dmocsny at uceng.uc.edu University of Cincinnati
513/751-6824 (home) 513/556-2007 (lab) Cincinnati, Ohio 45221-0171
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