TIA
- AA
For Algebra, the big two were Hungersford and Herstein. When I went back
for my masters, the professor said they were still the most popular ones.
When I was at Princeton, they used Herstein's "Topics in Algebra" for first
semester undergraduate abstract algebra. I used it my junior year.
Wonderful book. He also wrote a book called "Abstract Algebra", I believe,
which is an easier/shorter version, if that's what you're interested in. A
friend of mine who went to Michigan State for undergrad said they used
Hungerford (no "s") there for their graduate course, but I had heard it was
for undergrads, so I'm not sure about that one. I glanced at it once, and
it looked nowhere near as well-written as Herstein's book.
Michael
I used Hungerford for my undergrad work
"I would never use Hungerford again."
"The book sucks."
-- Prof. E.L. Lady, University of Hawaii
(Professor Lady is apparently a specialist in Algebra.)
David Ames
What about analysis, or advanced calculus (I'm not sure how the first
year's courses are called)?
Thanks again,
- AA
>What about analysis, or advanced calculus (I'm not sure how the first
>year's courses are called)?
I've always liked Spivak.
--
Adam Atkinson (gh...@mistral.co.uk)
If you are angry with someone, walk a mile in their shoes. Then you
will be a mile away from them. And you'll have their shoes.