The comprehensive treatment of the theory and general principles relevant to database systems, as well as the many examples, exercises, and bibliographic notes included in each chapter, should make this book useful for database courses and for practising computer scientists.
Principles of Systems
โ Scribed by Jay Wright Forrester
- Publisher
- Pegasus Communications
- Year
- 1968
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 197
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This key text on system dynamics shows by example how structure determines behavior. This book is ideal not just for managers but for anyone interested in the dynamics of urban, ecological, and other systems. It covers feedback dynamics, models and simulation, equations and computation, flow diagrams, information links, integration, and more. Reprinted in 1990.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The building blocks of MEMS design through closed-form solutionsMicroelectromechanical Systems, or MEMS, is the technology of very small systems; it is found in everything from inkjet printers and cars to cell phones, digital cameras, and medical equipment. This book describes the principles of MEMS
Presenting a comprehensive account of oscillator phase noise and frequency stability, this practical text is both mathematically rigorous and accessible. An in-depth treatment of the noise mechanism is given, describing the oscillator as a physical system, and showing that simple general laws govern
State-space methods form the basis of modern control theory. This textbook is devoted to a description of these methods in the analysis of linear multi-input, multi-output dynamic systems. Following a chapter that sets out the basic concepts and definitions, the author discusses state equations of f
<p>Distributed computer systems are now widely available but, despite a number of recent advances, the design of software for these systems remains a challenging task, involving two main difficulties: the absence of a shared clock and the absence of a shared memory. The absence of a shared clock mea