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1: Bibliography B
  • G. Backenstoss (1970) Pionic atoms. Annual Review of Nuclear and Particle Science 20, pp. 467–508.
  • K. L. Bell and N. S. Scott (1980) Coulomb functions (negative energies). Comput. Phys. Comm. 20 (3), pp. 447–458.
  • W. G. Bickley and J. Nayler (1935) A short table of the functions Ki n ( x ) , from n = 1 to n = 16 . Phil. Mag. Series 7 20, pp. 343–347.
  • W. G. Bickley (1935) Some solutions of the problem of forced convection. Philos. Mag. Series 7 20, pp. 322–343.
  • L. J. Billera, C. Greene, R. Simion, and R. P. Stanley (Eds.) (1996) Formal Power Series and Algebraic Combinatorics. DIMACS Series in Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer Science, Vol. 24, American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI.
  • 2: Bibliography K
  • R. B. Kearfott, M. Dawande, K. Du, and C. Hu (1994) Algorithm 737: INTLIB: A portable Fortran 77 interval standard-function library. ACM Trans. Math. Software 20 (4), pp. 447–459.
  • M. K. Kerimov (1980) Methods of computing the Riemann zeta-function and some generalizations of it. USSR Comput. Math. and Math. Phys. 20 (6), pp. 212–230.
  • A. V. Kitaev and A. H. Vartanian (2004) Connection formulae for asymptotics of solutions of the degenerate third Painlevé equation. I. Inverse Problems 20 (4), pp. 1165–1206.
  • C. Krattenthaler (1993) HYP and HYPQ. Mathematica packages for the manipulation of binomial sums and hypergeometric series respectively q -binomial sums and basic hypergeometric series. Séminaire Lotharingien de Combinatoire 30, pp. 61–76.
  • S. G. Krivoshlykov (1994) Quantum-Theoretical Formalism for Inhomogeneous Graded-Index Waveguides. Akademie Verlag, Berlin-New York.
  • 3: Software Index
    Open Source With Book Commercial
    20 Theta Functions
    25.21(ix) Dirichlet L -series a
  • Open Source Collections and Systems.

    These are collections of software (e.g. libraries) or interactive systems of a somewhat broad scope. Contents may be adapted from research software or may be contributed by project participants who donate their services to the project. The software is made freely available to the public, typically in source code form. While formal support of the collection may not be provided by its developers, within active projects there is often a core group who donate time to consider bug reports and make updates to the collection.

  • Software Associated with Books.

    An increasing number of published books have included digital media containing software described in the book. Often, the collection of software covers a fairly broad area. Such software is typically developed by the book author. While it is not professionally packaged, it often provides a useful tool for readers to experiment with the concepts discussed in the book. The software itself is typically not formally supported by its authors.