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Mathematical Atlas Online

vitaly.friedman writes "Whether you are looking for Complex analysis, Differential Equatiions or Probability and Statistics references, the Mathematical Atlas covers the whole area of mathematics and related subjects. The so-called 'Gateway to Mathematics' is a collection of articles about aspects of mathematics at and above the university level, but (usually) not at the level of current research. "The goal of this collection is to introduce the subject areas of modern mathematics, to describe a few of the milestone results and topics, and to give pointers to some of the key resources where further information is to be found. Like any good atlas, we try to present several ways to look at each area and to show its relationship with neighboring areas and sub-areas."

10 of 19 comments (clear)

  1. ANd what's wrong with Wolfram site? ;-) by PaulBu · · Score: 3, Informative

    http://mathworld.wolfram.com/ -- great resource, not necessarily only about Mathematica (TM), but math in general.

    Paul B.

    F.P.???

    1. Re:ANd what's wrong with Wolfram site? ;-) by dickeya · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Navigating the Wolfram site is a walk in the park when compared to the Math-atlas. I tried to find information on both sites regarding least-squares solutions of linear systems. Wolfram took me directly to what I wanted simply by using the search box, whereas the Math-atlas directed me to listing on the search page from which I had to choose from several options. After thinking about this for several moments, I clicked one that directed me to a bibliographical reference with no immediate gratification. I tried this from several other links and got the same.

      Websites have progressed quite a bit since year 2000 haven't they.....

    2. Re:ANd what's wrong with Wolfram site? ;-) by WaterBreath · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Well, there's nothing wrong with it. The Atlas doesn't appear to be intended to provide the level of detail that MathWorld does.

      But it does give a good overview of what a given broad topic is all about, in relatively layman terms. (Something MathWorld is not particularly concerned with.) And one thing it does offer that MathWorld doesn't is lists of resources for learning about the topics. Mathworld just has citations.

  2. Oh yeah by poopdeville · · Score: 3, Informative

    That's Davin Rusin's website. He just moved it to a new domain. It was on his edu website before. He's a nice guy. He's a regular poster on sci.math and (through cross-posting) sci.logic.

    --
    After all, I am strangely colored.
  3. How recent is this site? by musselm · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From the site: "This site last updated (and all links checked) 2002/04/1"

    It's a cool project, but man, it's ugly.

  4. Specific design suggestions by HerbieTMac · · Score: 3, Insightful
    It has been noted that the design of this website needs work. Let me reiterate that and add some specifics.

    • Color. Forget the dithering. It renders horribly on LCD monitors and low-refresh rate CRTs.
    • Search. Wow does that search need work. A google "site:math-atlas.org" thingy will work better.
    • Navigation. Some may not agree with me but tables would be a definite plus on this site. Keep a sidebar visible so that I can see where I am and easily click around.

    Overall, kudos for the content and generally improving the web.

  5. And for your particular problem... by PaulBu · · Score: 2, Informative

    (least-squares solution, that is), probably the best resource is "Numerical Recipes", they have been changing their location for as long as I remember, but Goodle says it is currently at http://www.nr.com/

    I remember dealing with that particualr issue myself... ;-)

    Paul B.

    1. Re:And for your particular problem... by ChadN · · Score: 4, Informative

      Well, since you mention Numerical Recipes, it is obligatory to post one of the many rebuttals. Basically, the books have some okay discussions (and cover a very WIDE range of subjects) but their code is crap. I say that boldly, since I must maintain code that was originally developed using their C libraries. There have always been better alternatives, and especially these days when so much is available on the web.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numerical_Recipes
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Scientific_Librar y
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_least_squares
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singular_value_decomp osition
      http://www.netlib.org/

      --
      "It's overkill, of course. But you can never have too much overkill." - Anonymous Slashdot Coward
  6. PlanetMath and Wikipedia by pfafrich · · Score: 2, Informative

    Two other good maths encyclopedias are PlanetMath and Wikipedia both are open content, open source etc. PlanetMath is pear reviewed and at a high level.

    --
    There are four sorts of people in the world: fools, lunatics, idiots and morons. - Umberto Eco, Foucaut's pendulum.
  7. ANd what's wrong with M$? ;-) by hadaso · · Score: 2, Funny

    Same kind of comparison...