An Introduction to Real Analysis
β Scribed by Derek G. Ball and C. Plumpton (Auth.)
- Publisher
- Elsevier Ltd, Pergamon Press
- Year
- 1973
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 318
- Series
- The Commonwealth and international library
- Edition
- 1st
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
Content:
THE COMMONWEALTH AND INTERNATIONAL LIBRARY, Page i
Front Matter, Page iii
Copyright, Page iv
PREFACE, Pages vii-viii
INTRODUCTION: THE PURPOSE OF REAL ANALYSIS, Pages ix-xvii
CHAPTER 1 - SETS, RELATIONS, AND FUNCTIONS, Pages 1-12
CHAPTER 2 - NUMBERS, Pages 13-35
CHAPTER 3 - SEQUENCES, Pages 36-69
CHAPTER 4 - SERIES, Pages 70-109
CHAPTER 5 - FUNCTIONS OF A REAL VARIABLE, Pages 110-148
CHAPTER 6 - THE DERIVATIVE, Pages 149-190
CHAPTER 7 - SOME IMPORTANT FUNCTIONS AND EXPANSIONS, Pages 191-233
CHAPTER 8 - THE RIEMANN INTEGRAL, Pages 234-289
ANSWERS AND HINTS, Pages 290-301
INDEX, Pages 303-305
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
"This book provides a compact, but thorough, introduction to the subject of Real Analysis. It is intended for a senior undergraduate and for a beginning graduate one-semester course."--Provided by publisher.</div> <br> Abstract: "This book provides a compact, but thorough, introduction t
These are some notes on introductory real analysis. They cover the properties of the real numbers, sequences and series of real numbers, limits of functions, continuity, differentiability, sequences and series of functions, and Riemann integration. They donβt include multi-variable calculus or conta
<i>An Introduction to Real Analysis</i> gives students of mathematics and related sciences an introduction to the foundations of calculus, and more generally, to the analytic way of thinking. The authors' style is a mix of formal and informal, with the intent of illustrating the practice of analysis
<span>An Introduction to Real Analysis gives students of mathematics and related sciences an introduction to the foundations of calculus, and more generally, to the analytic way of thinking. The authors' style is a mix of formal and informal, with the intent of illustrating the practice of analysis