𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

πŸ“

What Computing Is All About

✍ Scribed by Jan L. A. van de Snepscheut (auth.)


Publisher
Springer
Year
1993
Tongue
English
Leaves
478
Edition
1
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


I have always been fascinated with engineering. From Roman bridges and jumbo jets to steam engines and CD players, it is the privilege of the enΒ­ gineer to combine scientific insights and technical possibilities into useful and elegant products. Engineers get a great deal of satisfaction from the usefulness and beauty of their designs. Some of these designs have a major impact on our daily lives, others enable further scientific insights or shift limits of technology. The successful engineer is familiar with the scientific basis of the field and the technology of the components, and has an eye for the envisioned applications. For example, to build an airplane, one had better understand the physics of motion, the structural properties of aluΒ­ minum, and the size of passengers. And the physics of motion requires a mastery of mathematics, in particular calculus. Computers are a marvel of modern engineering. They come in a wide variety and their range of applications seems endless. One of the characΒ­ teristics that makes computers different from other engineering products is their programmability. Dishwashers have some limited programming capaΒ­ is not the key part of the device. Their essential part is some bility, but it enclosed space where the dishes are stored and flushed with hot water. Computers are embedded in many different environments, but in their case the programming capability is the essential part. All computers are programmed in more or less the same way.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages i-xii
What Is Computing All About?....Pages 1-9
Grammars....Pages 11-21
A Program Notation....Pages 23-51
Regular Expressions....Pages 53-73
Integrated Circuits....Pages 75-99
Recursive Descent Parsing....Pages 101-120
The Halting Problem and Formal Proofs....Pages 121-138
Some Programming Heuristics....Pages 139-172
Efficiency of Programs....Pages 173-182
Functional Programming....Pages 183-218
Program Inversion....Pages 219-251
A Collection of Nice Algorithms....Pages 253-280
Concurrent Programs....Pages 281-314
Implementation Issues: Compilation....Pages 315-356
An Example of a Compiler....Pages 357-384
The Construction of a Processor....Pages 385-401
Back Matter....Pages 403-476

✦ Subjects


Computer Science, general


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


What Computing Is All About
✍ Jan L.A.van de Snepscheut πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 1993 πŸ› Springer 🌐 English

This is a self-contained discussion of fundamental topics in computer science, which includes coverage of program semantics, automata theory, program and circuit design, concurrent programs and compilation. Formal proofs and practical applications are provided throughout the text.

What Computing Is All About
✍ Jan L.A.van de Snepscheut πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 1993 πŸ› Springer 🌐 English

This is a self-contained discussion of fundamental topics in computer science, which includes coverage of program semantics, automata theory, program and circuit design, concurrent programs and compilation. Formal proofs and practical applications are provided throughout the text.

What Cat Is That?: All About Cats
✍ Tish Rabe; Aristides Ruiz; Joe Mathieu πŸ“‚ Fiction πŸ“… 2013 πŸ› Random House Books for Young Readers 🌐 English

The Cat in the Hat learns all about catsβ€”wild and domesticβ€”in this feline-focused Cat in the Hat's Learning Library book! Traveling aboard his Kitty-Cat-Copter, the Cat takes Sally and Nick to meet lions in Kenya, tigers in Bangkok, Siamese down the blockβ€”learning along the way those traits that all

Love: What Life Is All About
✍ Leo F. Buscaglia πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 1996 πŸ› Ballantine Books 🌐 English

This book is about love. What it is and what it isn't. It is about you--and about everybody who has ever reached out to touch the heart of another. Among many other lessons of the heart, Leo Buscaglia reminds us: Love is open arms. If you close your arms about love you will find that you are left ho