Computational number theory. Thoughts on Part I. 2. Computational number theory. 3. Polynomial algebra. 4. Theoretical aspects of the discrete Fourier transform and convolution. 5. Cyclotomic polynomial factorization and associated fields. 6. Cyclotomic polynomial factorization in finite fields. 7.
Codes and algebraic curves: By Oliver Pretzel. Clarendon Press, Oxford, UK. (1998). 192 pages. $65.00
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 130 KB
- Volume
- 36
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0898-1221
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Java software development (Barry Boone). Section four. AWT. Answering frequently asked AWT questions (David Geary). Life span of an applet (Henry Wong). Section five. Patterns. Applying design patterns. in Java (Erich Gamma). Patterns and Java class libraries (Iseult White). Singleton (Dwight Deugo and Allen Benson). Section six. Techniques. How to drag and drop images (Jeremy Sevareid). Exception handling: More than just an add-on feature (Henry Wong). Tapping the power of JavaScript (Steven W. Disbrow). Section seven. Distributed computing. Distributed business applications using Java: An implementation framework (Hadha Bandarpalle and Raj Flatnakar). The Java.net library (Adam Freeman and Darrel Ince). Section eight. Persistence. Making Java objects persistent (Patrick O'Brien). StoreTable: A Java clsss for simple object persistence (Robert "Rock" Howard. Section nine. Lessons learned. Upgrading your web site to Java: The first step (Lowell Kaplan). Java training without getting soaked (David Moskowitz).
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES