MathGroup Archive 2007

[Date Index] [Thread Index] [Author Index]

Search the Archive

Re: Where is the Mathematica Book in

  • To: mathgroup at smc.vnet.net
  • Subject: [mg78134] Re: Where is the Mathematica Book in
  • From: Paul <pehowland at iee.org>
  • Date: Sat, 23 Jun 2007 07:18:57 -0400 (EDT)
  • References: <f2ejvs$id$1@smc.vnet.net> <f2h9i2$1a7$1@smc.vnet.net>

On 2007-05-17 12:08:02 +0200, David Bailey 
<dave at Remove_Thisdbailey.co.uk> said:

> W. Craig Carter wrote:
>> Many things in Mathematica 6 are an improvement---I have to agree that 
>> the documentation center is not one of them.  I often (and prefer to in 
>> many cases) work offline. Having the Mathematica book while working on 
>> an airplane was very useful.
>> 
>> However, I do appreciate the ability to create multiple help-center windows.
>> 
>> WCC
>> 
>>> The Mathematica Book is online at
>>> 
>>> http://documents.wolfram.com/mathematica/book/
>>> On Mon, 14 May 2007 02:49:32 -0500, Mark Adler <madler at alumni.caltech.edu>
>>> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> The old help function was actually helpful.
>>>> 
>> 
>> 
> Yes, indeed - please will Wolfram pull together the 6.0 documentation, 
> combine it with those parts of the 5.2 book that are still valid (most 
> of it) and create an up-to-date version of the Mathematica book! I 
> agree, that too many trees would be consumed to print the thing, so it 
> would only be available electronically. However it is necessary to have 
> well thought out continuous prose to put features into their correct 
> context.
> 
> David Bailey
> http://www.dbaileyconsultancy.co.uk

I second all of this.  Whilst the new help system is an improvement 
when used as reference guide, it is abysmal as any kind of overview or 
tutorial on Mathematica.  If I was starting from scratch with 
Mathematica now, I don't think I would ever be able to get into it.  
The guide, IMHO, needs two additional features: a) a logical "table of 
contents" which would allow be to see at a glance the overall features 
of Mathematica and the help on them; b) a few tutorial threads (much 
like Sun provide on their Java pages) which I could follow that would 
take me from complete novice through to guru.

Paul



  • Prev by Date: general
  • Next by Date: Re: Normally Distributed Random Matrix
  • Previous by thread: Parallel Computing Toolkit 2.1 now available
  • Next by thread: Demonstrations and other Mathematica 6 Training