Return Styles: Pseud0ch, Terminal, Valhalla, NES, Geocities, Blue Moon.

Pages: 1-

Mathematics BSc

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-28 6:20

I'm looking for an ebook or a group of ebooks that have all of the material needed for a mathematics BSc.
If thats not possible I would like to have a list of topics that you learn for the BSc.

Thanks.

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-28 11:19

irc.undernet.org;#bookz,#ebooks
Chiefly, make sure you know algebra. Then learn set theory and calculus. Become familiar with logic. Get an introductory topology text, one on real analysis and one on statistics, preferably. Or you could have Google'd it and saw this: http://documents.weber.edu/catalog/CURRENT/~mathb.htm

Good luck, I guess.

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-28 14:20

WHEN I WAS

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-28 15:46

A child,
My father took me into the lyceum
To hear a mathematics lecture

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-28 15:59

http://www.freebookspot.net/

You might find something here.

Name: Anonymous 2008-11-28 17:31

>>5
Not OP, but thanks all the same. Wish I'd known about that sooner - it seems to have most books the library 2 hours away from me carries.

Name: Anonymous 2008-12-02 15:03

>>1
I don't know of any sites that have an "e-math curriculum" like you appear to request, but if your aim is to have the math skills a math BSc would have then here's some tips:

To figure out what books you want look for universities that have their syllabus/assigned questions online. They also often post chapters that are included in the course (since profs love to use only half the book for various reasons).

The books schools use range from awesome to awful but usually average to mediocre. It's math though, grind the -usually plentiful- exercises and you'll probably be fine. Textbooks used by colleges (Anton's stuff for example) are usually popular so it should be easier to find torrents.

Oh, and, try emailing a math prof.

Name: Anonymous 2008-12-03 0:01

>>1
Any university will list its degree requirements online. It will be stuff like "Calculus 1/2, Linear Algebra, &c." Just get books on each of those topics, study up, and you're good to go.

Name: Anonymous 2008-12-12 8:41

i know what i've in my first year of an Msc. i can provide you with some book names. i've not used them that much as i have lecturers but they are pretty exact to what my lecturers teach.

Calculus:
G. Chartrand et al. : Mathematical Proofs, 2nd ed
and
R.A.Adams : Calculus - a Complete Course

linear algebra:
Linear Algebra and its Applications  by David C. Lay
Linear Algebra with applications by Steven J. Leon

also Differential Equations, Cryptography and Number Theory, Linear Algebra II, Introduction to Probability and Stats and others. i could go into specifics if you want, but i'll just copy and paste what they've put online.

there are a LOT of books here but some, it might be to much for you to download just for a few of them

http://www.torrentz.com/d912599cf3b8daf856cdb7f738b505a9e2c4c49e

Don't change these.
Name: Email:
Entire Thread Thread List