On Wed, Mar 24, 2010 at 8:36 PM, Dan Drake <dr...@kaist.edu> wrote:
> On Wed, 24 Mar 2010 at 06:29PM -0400, David Joyner wrote:
>> On Wed, Mar 24, 2010 at 6:14 PM, Dana Ernst <dcer...@plymouth.edu> wrote:
>> > Does anyone have any recommendations for an undergraduate Fourier
>> > analysis book? In particular, does anyone know of any open-source or
>> > affordable books that could naturally incorporate Sage?  I'm asking
>> > for a colleague of mine.  (The prerequisite for the course is
>> > Calculus II, but most of the students will also have had linear
>> > algebra.)
>>
>> This is a broad question. If you mean from the computational side,
>> please see the Computational Fourier Transforms notes at
>> http://boxen.math.washington.edu/home/wdj/teaching/index.html (BTW, a
>> publisher has asked me many times to "complete" this to a real book.
>> let me know if your colleague is interested...)
>
> The notes look very nice, and I might use them in my course next
> semester. I see one teeny-tiny thing: the web page says everything is
> CC-SA, but the Fourier transform notes say they're GFDL. :)


Thanks.
Oops:-) Basically, whatever license makes it easier to re-use is the
one I meant. Let me know if you need the latex source code.


>
> Dan
>
> --
> ---  Dan Drake
> -----  http://mathsci.kaist.ac.kr/~drake
> -------
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