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| NIST Digital Library of Mathematical Functions |
| Daniel W. Lozier
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NIST Digital Library of Mathematical Functions
Daniel W. Lozier
1
2
lozier@nist.gov
Abstract:
The National Institute of Standards and Technology is preparing a
Digital Library of Mathematical Functions (DLMF)
to provide useful data about special functions for a wide
audience.
The initial products will be a published handbook and companion
Web site, both scheduled for completion in 2003.
More than 50 mathematicians, physicists and computer scientists from
around the world are participating in the work.
The data to be covered include mathematical formulas, graphs, references,
methods of computation, and links to software.
Special features of the Web site include 3D interactive graphics
and an equation search capability.
The information technology tools that are being used are, of necessity,
ones that are
widely available now, even though better tools are in active
development.
For example, LaTeX files are being used as the common source for
both the handbook and the Web site.
This is the technology of choice for presentation of mathematics
in print but it is not well suited to equation search, for example, or
for input to computer algebra systems.
These and other problems, and some partially successful work-arounds,
are discussed in this paper and in the companion paper by Miller
and Youssef.
AMS(MOS) Codes33-00, 68T30
Footnotes
- ...
1
- Research was supported in part by NSF Grant 9980036 and
in part by the SIMA, SRD and ATP Programs at NIST.
- ...12
- A preliminary version of this article was presented at
the First International Workshop on Mathematical Knowledge
Management, RISC, A-4232 Schloss Hagenberg, Austria, September
24-26, 2001.
| NIST Digital Library of Mathematical Functions |
| Daniel W. Lozier
1
2 |
| Translated by Bruce R Miller on 2002-12-17 |
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