

These two additions showcase recent advances in the Wolfram Language and ensure that the whole book remains relevant and up to date.'Ĭhristopher Hanusa - Queens College, City University of New York

The new final chapter on 3D printing gives readers the tools to quickly design and 3D print physical objects that embody mathematical surfaces.

This new version shines some light on entity objects and accessing Wolfram's curated data which is needed because their structure is unintuitive and because of their growing prominence in the Wolfram ecosystem. ‘This book is an easy-to-read introduction to Mathematica. It is interspersed with helpful hints that make interacting with Mathematica more efficient and examples to test the reader's comprehension. This book is good for learning how to use Mathematica to graph functions, perform algebraic manipulation, and approach topics from calculus and linear algebra.
