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Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Technical Java: Applications for Science and Engineering

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TechnicalJava™
Developing Scientific and Engineering Applications
Grant Palmer
The practical, example-rich guide to Java technical programming
If you want to use Java todevelop scientific or engineering programs, Technical Java is the Java guide you’vebeen searching for. Using real-life examples, expert scientific programmerGrant Palmer shows how to build powerful, versatile, and flexible software forvirtually any technical application. Whether you’re moving from FORTRAN,C, or C ++, or learning Java as your first language, Palmer covers all you needto know—

Java, FORTRAN, C, and C ++, similarities, differences, and migration issues
Java 1.4 syntax, objects, classes, methods, interfaces, variables, arrays, exceptions, packages, I/O, and more
Working with java.math and creating your own math functions—including detailed trigonometric and transcendental examples
Data modeling, in depth: class hierarchies, generic class libraries, least-squares fit, fitting to non-polynomial equations, and more
Solving differential equations and systems of equations, including Gauss-Jordan and Gaussian elimination, lower-upper decomposition, and matrix inversion
Solving integral equations with both proper and improper integrals
Working with Fourier transforms (DFT and FFT)
Building Web and GUI-based technical applications with Swing/AWT and servlets

About the Author
GRANT PALMER, a scientific programmer at NASA Ames Research Centerin Moffett Field, CA, specializes in computational fluid dynamics programmingto predict friction-related heat in reentering space vehicles. He has writtenor contributed to five Java books, including Java Event Handling (Prentice HallPTR). Palmer resides in Chandler, Arizona.

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http://rapidshare.com/files/125107566/Technical_Java_Rilwis.tk.rar

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