|
Fundamental to Mathematica's dynamic interactivity capabilities is a new form of symbolic dynamic language. With a very small number of highly powerful primitives that mix freely with other language constructs, you can write a program in a direct symbolic style, and Mathematica will automatically track dependencies to make controls and output of any kind update dynamically. This tutorial collection includes in-depth discussion of the dynamic interactivity language, instant interface construction using Manipulate, as well as generalized input and the family of View constructs. Drawn from the in-product documentation of Mathematica, the 23-title Tutorial Collection gives users targeted instruction on the functions, capabilities, and unified architecture of the Mathematica system. The Collection discontinued printing as of January 2012, but the Mathematica 7 edition of each title remains available for download as a PDF.
|
|