How to Model It: Problem Solving for the Computer Age
โ Scribed by A. M. Starfield, Karl A. Smith, A. L. Bleloch
- Publisher
- Mcgraw-Hill College
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 219
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Table of Contents
Cover......Page __sk_0000.djvu
Copyright......Page __sk_0002.djvu
Contents......Page __sk_0005.djvu
Preface......Page __sk_0007.djvu
1 Introducing Models (and this book)......Page __sk_0013.djvu
2 Time for Ping-Pong?......Page __sk_0027.djvu
3 Purging a Gas Storage Tank......Page __sk_0042.djvu
4 The Case of the Hot and Thirsty Executive......Page __sk_0066.djvu
5 Tennis, Anyone?......Page __sk_0082.djvu
6 Food for Thought......Page __sk_0103.djvu
7 The Student's Dilemma: French, Calculus, Time, and Money......Page __sk_0121.djvu
8 A Cab Control System......Page __sk_0141.djvu
9 The Case of the Dishonest Advertiser......Page __sk_0170.djvu
10 The Librarian's Dilemma......Page __sk_0194.djvu
Index......Page __sk_0217.djvu
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Probabilistic models for computer networks: Tools and solved problems overviews the main probabilistic tools and theory used in the performance analysis and modelling of modern computer networks and communication systems. With over one hundred examples and solved problems, the reader will be introdu
<i>It's Not About the Shark</i> opens the door to the groundbreaking science of solutions by turning problemsโand how we solve themโupside down. When we have a problem, most of us zero in, take it apart, and focus until we have it solved. David Niven shows us that focusing on the problem is exactly
<p><i>It's Not About the Shark</i> opens the door to the groundbreaking science of solutions by turning problemsโand how we solve themโupside down. When we have a problem, most of us zero in, take it apart, and focus until we have it solved. David Niven shows us that focusing on the problem is exact
<p><i>It's Not About the Shark</i> opens the door to the groundbreaking science of solutions by turning problemsโand how we solve themโupside down. When we have a problem, most of us zero in, take it apart, and focus until we have it solved. David Niven shows us that focusing on the problem is exact
The easiest way to solve the hardest problems! Geometry's extensive use of figures and visual calculations make its word problems especially difficult to solve. This book picks up where most textbooks leave off, making techniques for solving problems easy to grasp and offering many illustrative exam