A quantitative study of the efficiency of computer methods requires an in-depth understanding of both mathematics and computer science. This monograph, derived from an advanced computer science course at Stanford University, builds on the fundamentals of combinatorial analysis and complex variable t
Mathematics for the Analysis of Algorithms
β Scribed by Daniel H. Greene, Donald E. Knuth (auth.)
- Publisher
- BirkhΓ€user Basel
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 141
- Series
- Progress in Computer Science and Applied Logic (PCS) 1
- Edition
- 3
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A quantitative study of the efficiency of computer methods requires an in-depth understanding of both mathematics and computer science. This monograph, derived from an advanced computer science course at Stanford University, builds on the fundamentals of combinatorial analysis and complex variable theory to present many of the major paradigms used in the precise analysis of algorithms, emphasizing the more difficult notions. The authors cover recurrence relations, operator methods, and asymptotic analysis in a format that is terse enough for easy reference yet detailed enough for those with little background. Approximately half the book is devoted to original problems and solutions from examinations given at Stanford.
"...a very valuable collection of mathematical techniques for the analysis of algorithms..." β Mathematical Reviews
"The book covers the important mathematical tools used in computer science, especially in the exact analysis of algorithms. A wide range of topics are covered, from the binomial theorem to the saddle point method and Laplaceβs techniques for asymptotic analysis...The book is very well written. The style and the mathematical exposition make the book pleasant to read...It covers many of the major paradigms used in the analysis of algorithms in its one hundred plus pages." β SIAM Review
"The book presents a welcome selection and careful exposition of material that can be (and is) covered in a single course...In this reviewerβs opinion, this would be an interesting text to use with a group of advanced students well-grounded in undergraduate mathematics and computer science, and would produce a valuable course for the participating students." β Computing Reviews
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-viii
Binomial Identities....Pages 1-10
Recurrence Relations....Pages 11-30
Operator Methods....Pages 31-41
Asymptotic analysis....Pages 42-76
Back Matter....Pages 77-132
β¦ Subjects
Algorithms; Algorithm Analysis and Problem Complexity; Computational Science and Engineering
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
A quantitative study of the efficiency of computer methods requires an in-depth understanding of both mathematics and computer science. This monograph, derived from an advanced computer science course at Stanford University, builds on the fundamentals of combinatorial analysis and complex variable t
This monograph collects some fundamental mathematical techniques that are required for the analysis of algorithms. It builds on the fundamentals of combinatorial analysis and complex variable theory to present many of the major paradigms used in the precise analysis of algorithms, emphasizing the mo
A quantitative study of the efficiency of computer methods requires an in-depth understanding of both mathematics and computer science. This monograph, derived from an advanced computer science course at Stanford University, builds on the fundamentals of combinatorial analysis and complex variable t
This book is a gem of problem sets AND solutions, in the field of algorithms. The problems were from actual examinations given at Stanford in various computer science classes. About half the book is good descriptive text about the ideas that the problems probe. Certainly, well written, as befits Knu