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Logic and Discrete Mathematics: A Computer Science Perspective |  | Authors: Winfried Karl Grassmann, Jean-Paul Tremblay Publisher: Prentice Hall Category: Book
List Price: $127.80 Buy New: $76.07 as of 9/8/2010 22:31 MDT details You Save: $51.73 (40%)
New (9) Used (12) from $59.95
Seller: internationalbooks Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 624358
Media: Paperback Edition: United States ed Pages: 750 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.7 Dimensions (in): 8.7 x 6.8 x 1.8
ISBN: 0135012066 Dewey Decimal Number: 005.1015113 EAN: 9780135012062 ASIN: 0135012066
Publication Date: December 28, 1995 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description This book covers all the traditional topics of discrete mathematicslogic, sets, relations, functions, and graphsand reflects recent trends in computer science.Shows how to use discrete mathematics and logic for specifying new computer applications, and how to reason about programs in a systematic way. Describes Prolog, a programming language based on logic, and a section on Miranda, language bad on functions. Features numerous examples which relate the mathematical concepts to problems in computer science.
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| Customer Reviews: University Level material August 26, 2003 8 out of 9 found this review helpful
I have used this textbook when delivering a second year University class on this topic and found that the thorough coverage of the topics was appreciated by my students. Even more important to them was the large number of examples that are presented, in detail, throughout the text.This is a University Level textbook, not a Study Guide, and respects the reader's intellectual maturity by preparing them for subsequent classes. The perception of "density" implies that it is best taken with a liberal dose of classroom instruction - not many students seem to intuitively grasp discrete mathematics and learn the material wholly on their own. I know that I certainly did not when I was an undergrad! For students who feel that the material is difficult, I always suggest using the library for another point of view. I also recommend the Schaum's Outline for Discrete Mathematics as a companion if the student is having significant difficulty with the concepts. Obviously, I like the book, so why not a 5? Unfortunately, I don't know of any books that I would grant a 5 - the authors can always do something better :-)
Not for first-time students.. November 13, 2001 3 out of 11 found this review helpful
I'm sure this book covers all the stuff that it's meant to and I'm sure that if I was a post-grad in maths this would be a good book to use. However for anyone else this book is way too heavy reading. The authors have made no attempt to keep the material easy to study and understand. The whole book is just a continuous stream of information with the density of a neutron star and where every 5th or so word is a mathematical formula. Then again maybe I'm just biased because I hate the subject matter - I think it's unnecesarily obscure and difficult for a general computer science course. And look at the price - that's nearly $150 for us Aussies, (although our uni co-op sells it for about A$90) and that doesn't include shipping fees. Don't you hate it the way they jack up the price on these text books because they know that you have to buy it to have any chance of passing the course.
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