Mathematics Books

Hai :D

Does anyone have a collection of Veeky Forums approved mathematics books from brainlet to advanced level. I have just finished my first year so I have basically covered brainlet calculus, brainlet linear algebra, and then you have that course of assorted ultra-brainlet introduction to all things (geometry, number theory, groups, proof stuff etc etc) but of course the advanced books are useful later thnx :)

Other urls found in this thread:

Veeky
twitter.com/AnonBabble

Search /t/ a bit. There are quite a few libraries floating around.

Some of them have some really sweet stuff.

hoii ^.^
here's le ebin Veeky Forums guide for beginning non brainlet math wooo!

>Analysis I by Terrence Tao
>Linear Algebra by Hoffman & Kunze

these will get you up and going in no time! :) good luck xoxoxo
if you haff trouble (proof is hard ;-;) then see How to Prove it or Book of Proof for sum nice pointers! :]

o I have not looked in this forum ever!

Thnx fren :) I have the latter 2 books on proof yasssss

when someone asks for nice pointers on books giving very specific descriptions of what they want and their current knowledge, pointing them to gigantic useless lists is the worst you can do. stop

>0. Remedial Mathematics
Khan Academy

-- -- -- --

>1. The Prerequisites of University Mathematics
Pre-Calculus - Carl Stitz & Jeff Zeager
Calculus: A Modern Approach - Jeff Knisley & Kevin Shirley
How to Prove It - D. J. Velleman

-- -- -- --

Pick One Path:

>2a. Introduction to Applied Mathematics (Some Proofs)
Linear Algebra and Its Applications - David C. Lay
Calculus of Several Variables - Serge Lang
Differential Equations - Shepley Ross


>2b. Introduction to Pure Mathematics (Proof-Based)
Calculus Vol. I & II - T. M. Apostol
Principles of Topology - Fred H. Croom
A Book of Abstract Algebra - C. C. Pinter


>2c. The Mixed Approach
Linear Algebra and Its Applications - David C. Lay
Calculus of Several Variables - Serge Lang
Differential Equations - Shepley Ross
Principles of Topology - Fred H. Croom
A Book of Abstract Algebra - C. C. Pinter


-- -- -- --

>3. Foundations for Advanced Pure Mathematics
Linear Algebra - K. M. Hoffman & Ray Kunze
Analysis I & II - Terence Tao
Visual Complex Analysis - Tristan Needham
Algebra - Michael Artin

Thnx :)

I know you really like your list but he said what stage he's in and what he wants. this is useless at best and misleading at worst

The list isn't misleading whatsoever. He clearly is somewhere in stage 2 heading into stage 3. He could start with 2c from Croom to Pinter before heading into 3 to get his pure mathematics foundations covered. And if he sucks at proofing, then he can always head back to 1 and read his Velleman.

I know you're trying to be ironic, but these are pretty good recommendations for a beginner. Everyone's gotta start somewhere.

I'm not being ironic, I know the recommendation is spot on, I'm just playing along with the language.

Veeky Forums-science.wikia.com/wiki/Mathematics

What does that image on the cover have to do with Calculus?
I've got a biggun.

Useful thnx fren

berery welcome!! :)))

There is a thread with almost all the books in the wiki on /t/

If I recall it right, what he said was something like this:
>Does anyone have a collection of Veeky Forums approved mathematics books

Here's one of the "All Embracing Library" magnet links for OP, which is well seeded and contains a very broad range of mathematical e-books.
magnet:?xt=urn:btih:488eb9134190440bbf1e77929754321c85a24c72&dn=The+All-Embracing+Library&tr=udp://tracker.openbittorrent.com:80&tr=udp://open.demonii.com:1337

Now, user, stop being a retard and help OP for once.

Here you go

Kool beans thnx

>posting the meme list

That's not the meme list. This is the meme list. And it's fucking amazing.

>Random singles and Noise
>Women's studies
Holy kek.

>tfw no ebook of Spivak 4ed