This collaborative book is intended to collect a comprehensive list of online Maple resources and links. Feel free to add entries as well as entire categories.
I just purchased Maple 10 to use in calculating transmission line drops and high voltage reactance tests.
Can some one recommend a good book to get me going to be able to produce reports using Maple 10 mathematics. I am muddling through some of the tutorials learning syntax and formatting.
While it isn't a book, and won't help you there, you might check out my Syrup package for analyzing electric circuits. It is available at the Maple website in the Applications section. It can read spice decks and symbolically solve them. For example,
The pdf mentioned above uses Maple V R3, or perhaps earlier, and so is a bit dated. There's nothing on transmission lines shown in the index. Out of curiosity I checked a simple example about radioactive decay: the answer shown was wrong!
Comments
Good beginner book?
I just purchased Maple 10 to use in calculating transmission line drops and high voltage reactance tests.
Can some one recommend a good book to get me going to be able to produce reports using Maple 10 mathematics. I am muddling through some of the tutorials learning syntax and formatting.
Thanks,
Mike
electric circuits
While it isn't a book, and won't help you there, you might check out my Syrup package for analyzing electric circuits. It is available at the Maple website in the Applications section. It can read spice decks and symbolically solve them. For example,
with(Syrup): ckt := " V1 1 0 R1 1 2 C1 2 0 .end": syrup(ckt, ac); / V1 \ { v[1] = V1, v[2] = ----------- } \ 1 + s C1 R1/ dsolve(syrup(ckt,tran)); / t \ v[C1](t) = V1 - exp|- -----| V1 \ C1 R1/Alas, it doesn't have a transmission line element, but you might find it useful, regardless.
Good beginner book?
The link below has a pdf file that might be of use to you.
http://www.gatewaycoalition.org/files/Maple.pdf
Regards,
Georgios Kokovidis
Old books
The pdf mentioned above uses Maple V R3, or perhaps earlier, and so is a bit dated. There's nothing on transmission lines shown in the index. Out of curiosity I checked a simple example about radioactive decay: the answer shown was wrong!
J. Tarr