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Mathematics in Programming [electronic resource] / by Xinyu Liu.

By: Liu, Xinyu [author.].
Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Singapore : Springer Nature Singapore : Imprint: Springer, 2024Edition: 1st ed. 2024.Description: XII, 383 p. 197 illus. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9789819724321.Subject(s): Computer science | Computer science -- Mathematics | Mathematics | Computer Science Logic and Foundations of Programming | Mathematical Applications in Computer Science | Mathematics in Popular ScienceAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 004.0151 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Chapter 1 Numbers -- Chapter 2 Recursion -- Chapter 3 Symmetry -- Chapter 4 Category -- Chapter 5 Fusion -- Chapter 6 Infinity -- Chapter 7 Paradox.
In: Springer Nature eBookSummary: The book presents the mathematical view and tools of computer programming with broad and friendly context. It explains the basic concepts such as recursion, computation model, types, data, and etc. The book serves as an introductory and reference guide to the engineers, students, researchers, and professionals who are interested in functional programming, type system, and computer programming languages. The book covers seven topics. Firstly, it lays out the number system based on Peano Axioms and demonstrates the isomorphic computer data structures. Then, it introduces Lambda calculus as a computing model and recursion, an important programming structure, with the Y-combinator. It next presents the basic abstract algebra, including group and fields, and provides a friendly introduction to Galois theory. After that, it uses category theory as a tool to explain several concepts in computer programming, including the type system, polymorphism, null handler, and recursive data types, then followed by an application of program optimization. In the last two chapters, the author shows how to program with the concept of infinity through stream and lazy evaluation, and then explains the naïve set theory and transfinite numbers, from which the logic paradox arises. Finally, it introduces four historical views of mathematical foundation, as well as Gödel's incompleteness theorems developed in 1930s, and how they define the boundaries of computer programming. Additionally, the book provides biographies, stories, and anecdotes of 25 mathematicians, along with over 130 exercises and their corresponding answers.
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Chapter 1 Numbers -- Chapter 2 Recursion -- Chapter 3 Symmetry -- Chapter 4 Category -- Chapter 5 Fusion -- Chapter 6 Infinity -- Chapter 7 Paradox.

The book presents the mathematical view and tools of computer programming with broad and friendly context. It explains the basic concepts such as recursion, computation model, types, data, and etc. The book serves as an introductory and reference guide to the engineers, students, researchers, and professionals who are interested in functional programming, type system, and computer programming languages. The book covers seven topics. Firstly, it lays out the number system based on Peano Axioms and demonstrates the isomorphic computer data structures. Then, it introduces Lambda calculus as a computing model and recursion, an important programming structure, with the Y-combinator. It next presents the basic abstract algebra, including group and fields, and provides a friendly introduction to Galois theory. After that, it uses category theory as a tool to explain several concepts in computer programming, including the type system, polymorphism, null handler, and recursive data types, then followed by an application of program optimization. In the last two chapters, the author shows how to program with the concept of infinity through stream and lazy evaluation, and then explains the naïve set theory and transfinite numbers, from which the logic paradox arises. Finally, it introduces four historical views of mathematical foundation, as well as Gödel's incompleteness theorems developed in 1930s, and how they define the boundaries of computer programming. Additionally, the book provides biographies, stories, and anecdotes of 25 mathematicians, along with over 130 exercises and their corresponding answers.

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