Chapter 1 Introduction 1 1.1 Drawing a Triangle 2 1.2 Drawing a Triangle Mesh 17 1.3 Drawing a Complicated Scene 27 1.4 Abstraction of Systems 27 Chapter 2 Core Systems 31 2.1 The Low-Level System 31 2.1.1 Basic Data Structures 33 2.1.2 Encapsulatin
Table of Contents 1. Introduction....................................................................................................................................................2 1.1 What's Special About UNIX?....................................
Copyright Addison-Wesley Professional Computing Series List of Figures List of Tables List of Examples Preface Who Should Read This Book How to Use This Book Related References Conventions Used in This Book Our Case Studies Author's Acknowledgements
aWhat's new in the new version of lcc-win ---------------------------------------- Dec 3: Added SphericalBesselY + SphericalBesselK + SphericalBesselJ to the special functions package. Updated the documentation. Dec 2: Fixed problems with comparison
Contents Acknowledgements Introduction Who Is This Book For? What Does This Book Cover? How This Book Is Structured What Do You Need to Use This Book? Conventions Source Code Errata xix xxi xxi xxii xxii xxv xxv xxv xxv Chapter 1: Unix Fundamentals
Preface xv Introduction xvii Mathematical Notation xix Pseudo-Code xxi Contributors xxvi 1 2D GEOMETRY Useful 2D Geometry 3 Trigonometry Summary 12 Useful Trigonometry 13 Trigonometric Functions at Select Points 18 Triangles 20 Generating Random Poi
Linux System Administrator Guide Version0.9Table of ContentsAbout This Book.................................................................................................................................................11. Acknowledgments..........
mplement state-of-the-art techniques to visualize solutions to challenging problems in scientific computing, with the use of the SciPy stack. About This Book Master the theory and algorithms behind numerical recipes and how they can be applied to re