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Table of Contents
Fortran and Scientific Computing
Description
This course presents a structured approach to computer based problem solving in a variety of scientific and engineering settings. It introduces the FORTRAN programming language and its interface with scientific libraries. Applications are drawn from scientific and engineering areas such as numerical methods, processing experimental data, simulation and data visualization.
Instructor & Office Hours
- Email Filter: The string
CSE2501/X
in the Subject field, whereX
is your username onred@cse
. - Meets: 11:30-13:00 on Mondays either in BC 215 or in the PRISM Lab (CSEB 1002). See the Calendar page to know the venue for each Monday in the term.
- First meet: Mon Jan 4 in BC 215
- Office Hours: Mondays 14:30-15:30
Teaching Assistant
- Ossama, email: ossama (add
@cse.yorku.ca
)
Textbooks
There is no required textbook for the course. Here are some references:
- A FORTRAN Primer, by: E. Templeton, J. McConnel and A. Stauffer, McGraw-Hill (1988)
- FORTRAN 77 for Engineers and Scientists, by: Nyhoff and Leestma, Prentice-Hall (1992)
- FORTRAN, by: Koffman & Friedman, Addison-Wesley (1997)
- FORTRAN 77 with 90, by: R. Reddy and C. Ziegler, WEST publishing Company (1994)
- FORTRAN for Today & Tomorrow, by: M. Pressman, Wm.C.Brown Communications (1993)
- FORTRAN 90 Programming, by: T. Ellis, I. Philips and T. Lahey, Addison-Wesley (1995)
start.txt · Last modified: 2010/07/08 12:03 by roumani