A history of algorithms
from the pebble to the microchip
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Author
Contributions
- Chabert, Jean-Luc. - Contributor
- Barbin, E. - Contributor
Publication
1999 - Springer, Berlin
Language
English
Word Count
131,000 words, Guess
Page Count
524 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL360413M
- ISBN-103540633693
- OCLC Control Number39122844
- OCLC Control Number59437129
- Internet Archivehistoryalgorithm00chab
and 3 more
- Library of Congress Control Number98020468
- Goodreads1670956
- LibraryThing5021445
Classifications
- DDC511/.8
- LCCQA58 .H5813 1998
Description
A Source Book for the History of Mathematics, but one which offers a different perspective by focusing on algorithms. With the development of computing has come an awakening of interest in algorithms. Often neglegted by historians and modern scientists, more concerned with the nature of concepts, algorithmic procedures turn out to have been instrumental in the development of fundamental ideas: practice led to theory just as much as the other way round. The purpose of this book is to offer a historical background to contemporary algorithmic practice. Each chapter centres around a theme, more or less in chronological order, and the story is told through the reading of over 200 original texts, faithfully reproduced. This provides an opportunity for the reader to sit alongside such mathematicians as Archimedes, Omar Khayyam, Newton, Euler and Gauss as they explain their techniques. The book ends with an account of the development of the modern concept of algorithm.
Subjects
Topics
Other Editions
- A history of algorithms
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