Jump to content

Concrete Mathematics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Concrete Math)
Concrete Mathematics: A Foundation for Computer Science
The cover displays the mathematical symbol for summationΣ, inscribed in concrete.
AuthorRonald Graham, Donald Knuth, and Oren Patashnik
LanguageEnglish
SubjectMathematics
Computer science
PublisherAddison–Wesley
Publication date
1994
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
Pages657 pp (Second Edition)
ISBN0-201-55802-5
OCLC29357079
510 20
LC ClassQA39.2 .G733 1994

Concrete Mathematics: A Foundation for Computer Science, by Ronald Graham, Donald Knuth, and Oren Patashnik, first published in 1989, is a textbook that is widely used in computer-science departments as a substantive but light-hearted treatment of the analysis of algorithms.

Contents and history

[edit]

The book provides mathematical knowledge and skills for computer science, especially for the analysis of algorithms. According to the preface, the topics in Concrete Mathematics are "a blend of CONtinuous and disCRETE mathematics". Calculus is frequently used in the explanations and exercises. The term "concrete mathematics" also denotes a complement to "abstract mathematics".

The book is based on a course begun in 1970 by Knuth at Stanford University. The book expands on the material (approximately 100 pages)[1] in the "Mathematical Preliminaries"[2] section of Knuth's The Art of Computer Programming. Consequently, some readers use it as an introduction to that series of books.

Concrete Mathematics has an informal and often humorous style. The authors reject what they see as the dry style of most mathematics textbooks. The margins contain "mathematical graffiti", comments submitted by the text's first editors: Knuth and Patashnik's students at Stanford.

As with many of Knuth's books, readers are invited to claim a reward for any error found in the book—in this case, whether an error is "technically, historically, typographically, or politically incorrect".[3]

The book popularized some mathematical notation: the Iverson bracket, floor and ceiling functions, and notation for rising and falling factorials.

Typography

[edit]

Donald Knuth used the first edition of Concrete Mathematics as a test case for the AMS Euler typeface and Concrete Roman font.[4]

Chapter outline

[edit]

Editions

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Stenger, Allen (18 November 2010). "Review of Concrete Mathematics: A Foundation for Computer Science, 2nd edition by Ronald L. Graham, Donald E. Knuth, and Oren Patashnik". MAA Reviews, Mathematical Association of America.
  2. ^ Knuth, Donald E. (1997). "Mathematical Preliminaries". The Art of Computer Programming, Volume 1. Fundamental Algorithms (3rd ed.). ISBN 9780321635747.
  3. ^ Graham, Knuth and Patashnik: Concrete Mathematics
  4. ^ Donald E. Knuth. Typesetting Concrete Mathematics, TUGboat 10 (1989), 31–36, 342. Reprinted as chapter 18 of the book Digital Typography.
[edit]