Introduction to Coding Theory
β Scribed by J. H. van Lint (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 1982
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 180
- Series
- Graduate Texts in Mathematics 86
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-ix
Mathematical Background....Pages 1-21
Shannonβs Theorem....Pages 22-30
Linear Codes....Pages 31-41
Some Good Codes....Pages 42-53
Bounds on Codes....Pages 54-69
Cyclic Codes....Pages 70-90
Perfect Codes and Uniformly Packed Codes....Pages 91-106
Goppa Codes....Pages 107-115
Asymptotically Good Algebraic Codes....Pages 116-121
Arithmetic Codes....Pages 122-129
Convolutional Codes....Pages 130-143
Back Matter....Pages 144-174
β¦ Subjects
Number Theory
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Error-correcting codes constitute one of the key ingredients in achieving the high degree of reliability required in modern data transmission and storage systems. This book introduces the reader to the theoretical foundations of this subject with the emphasis on the Reed-Solomon codes and their d
Error-correcting codes constitute one of the key ingredients in achieving the high degree of reliability required in modern data transmission and storage systems. This book introduces the reader to the theoretical foundations of error-correcting codes, with an emphasis on Reed-Solomon codes and thei
<p>It is gratifying that this textbook is still sufficiently popular to warrant a third edition. I have used the opportunity to improve and enlarge the book. When the second edition was prepared, only two pages on algebraic geometry codes were added. These have now been removed and replaced by a rel
The first edition of this book was conceived in 1981 as an alternative to outdated, oversized, or overly specialized textbooks in this area of discrete mathematics-a field that is still growing in importance as the need for mathematicians and computer scientists in industry continues to grow. The bo