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  • av Chris Fehily
    361,-

    2024 update. Author site: fehily.com. This book teaches newcomers SQL, the language of databases, and includes examples for the most widely used database systems. In all its editions, this book has sold more than 150,000 copies and is popular with end users, students, data scientists, statisticians, epidemiologists, analysts, app developers, webmasters, and hobbyists. Thorough cross-referencing makes it a useful desktop reference for experienced SQL programmers.Covers Oracle Database, Microsoft SQL Server, Microsoft Access, IBM Db2 Database, MySQL, PostgreSQL, and Standard SQL.Hundreds of examples of varied difficulty encourage you to experiment and explore.Download the sample database and SQL source code to follow along with the examples.Organize your database in terms of the relational model.Master tables, columns, rows, and keys.Retrieve, filter, sort, and format data.Use functions and operators to transform and summarize data.Create, alter, and drop database tables.Answer hard questions by using joins, subqueries, constraints, conditional logic, and metadata.Create indexes that speed sorts and searches.Use views to secure and simplify data access.Insert, update, delete, and merge data.Execute transactions to maintain the integrity of your data.Avoid common pitfalls involving nulls.Troubleshoot and optimize queries.Learn advanced techniques that extend the power of SQL.ContentsIntroduction1. Running SQL Programs2. The Relational Model3. SQL Basics4. Retrieving Data from a Table5. Operators and Functions6. Summarizing and Grouping Data7. Joins8. Subqueries9. Set Operations10. Inserting, Updating, and Deleting Rows11. Creating, Altering, and Dropping Tables12. Indexes13. Views14. Transactions15. Advanced SQLAbout the AuthorChris Fehily is a statistician and author living in Carmel, California.

  • av Tim Hill
    157,-

    Ready to step up your game in calculus? This workbook isn't the usual parade of repetitive questions and answers. Author Tim Hill's approach lets you work on problems you enjoy, rather than through exercises and drills you fear, without the speed pressure, timed testing, and rote memorization that damage your experience of mathematics. Working through varied problems in this anxiety-free way helps you develop an understanding of numerical relations apart from the catalog of mathematical facts that's often stressed in classrooms and households. This number sense, common in high-achieving students, lets you apply and combine concepts, methods, and numbers flexibly, without relying on distant memories.Solutions to basic problems are steeped in the fundamentals, including notation, terminology, definitions, theories, proofs, physical laws, and related concepts.Advanced problems explore variations, tricks, subtleties, and real-world applications.Problems build gradually in difficulty with little repetition. If you get stuck, then flip back a few pages for a hint or to jog your memory.Numerous pictures depicting mathematical facts help you connect visual and symbolic representations of numbers and concepts.Treats calculus as a problem-solving art requiring insight and intuitive understanding, not as a branch of logic requiring careful deductive reasoning.Discards the common and damaging misconception that fast students are strong students. Good students aren't particularly fast with numbers because they think deeply and carefully about mathematics.Detailed solutions and capsule reviews greatly reduce the need to cross reference a comprehensive calculus textbook.Topics covered: The tangent line. Delta notation. The derivative of a function. Differentiable functions. Leibniz notation. Average and instantaneous velocity. Speed. Projectile paths. Rates of change. Acceleration. Marginal cost. Limits. Epsilon-delta definition. Limit laws. Trigonometric limits. Continuity. Continuous functions. The Mean Value Theorem. The Extreme Value Theorem. The Intermediate Value Theorem. Fermat's theorem.Prerequisite mathematics: Elementary algebra. Real numbers. Functions. Graphs. Trigonometry.Contents1. The Slope of the Tangent Line2. The Definition of the Derivative3. Velocity and Rates of Change4. Limits5. Continuous FunctionsAbout the AuthorTim Hill is a statistician living in Boulder, Colorado. He holds degrees in mathematics and statistics from Stanford University and the University of Colorado. Tim has written guides for calculus, trigonometry, algebra, geometry, precalculus, permutations and combinations, and Excel pivot tables. When he's not crunching numbers, Tim climbs rocks, hikes canyons, and avoids malls.

  • av Tim Hill
    157,-

    Ready to step up your game in calculus? This workbook isn't the usual parade of repetitive questions and answers. Author Tim Hill's approach lets you work on problems you enjoy, rather than through exercises and drills you fear, without the speed pressure, timed testing, and rote memorization that damage your experience of mathematics. Working through varied problems in this anxiety-free way helps you develop an understanding of numerical relations apart from the catalog of mathematical facts that's often stressed in classrooms and households. This number sense, common in high-achieving students, lets you apply and combine concepts, methods, and numbers flexibly, without relying on distant memories.Solutions to basic problems are steeped in the fundamentals, including notation, terminology, definitions, theories, proofs, physical laws, and related concepts.Advanced problems explore variations, tricks, subtleties, and real-world applications.Problems build gradually in difficulty with little repetition. If you get stuck, then flip back a few pages for a hint or to jog your memory.Numerous pictures depicting mathematical facts help you connect visual and symbolic representations of numbers and concepts.Treats calculus as a problem-solving art requiring insight and intuitive understanding, not as a branch of logic requiring careful deductive reasoning.Discards the common and damaging misconception that fast students are strong students. Good students aren't particularly fast with numbers because they think deeply and carefully about mathematics.Detailed solutions and capsule reviews greatly reduce the need to cross reference a comprehensive calculus textbook.Topics covered: Basic trigonometry. Limits, derivatives, integrals, and graphs of basic and inverse trigonometric functions. Solids of revolution. Buffon's needle problem. The corridor problem. Simple harmonic motion. Newton's second law of motion. The hyperbolic functions sinh, cosh, and tanh. Catenaries.Prerequisite mathematics: Tangent lines. Curve sketching. Limits. Continuity. Basic derivatives. Basic integrals. Inverse functions. Maxima and minima. Inflection points.Contents1. Review of Trigonometry2. Elementary Trigonometry3. Derivatives of Sine and Cosine4. Integrals of Sine and Cosine5. Derivatives of Other Trigonometric Functions6. Inverse Trigonometric Functions7. Harmonic Motion8. Hyperbolic FunctionsAbout the AuthorTim Hill is a statistician living in Boulder, Colorado. He holds degrees in mathematics and statistics from Stanford University and the University of Colorado. Tim has written guides for calculus, trigonometry, algebra, geometry, precalculus, permutations and combinations, and Excel pivot tables. When he's not crunching numbers, Tim climbs rocks, hikes canyons, and avoids malls.

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