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q-binomial theorem

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21: Peter L. Walker
Walker’s books are An Introduction to Complex Analysis, published by Hilger in 1974, The Theory of Fourier Series and Integrals, published by Wiley in 1986, Elliptic Functions. A Constructive Approach, published by Wiley in 1996, and Examples and Theorems in Analysis, published by Springer in 2004. …
22: 12.13 Sums
§12.13(i) Addition Theorems
23: 27.2 Functions
§27.2(i) Definitions
(See Gauss (1863, Band II, pp. 437–477) and Legendre (1808, p. 394).) This result, first proved in Hadamard (1896) and de la Vallée Poussin (1896a, b), is known as the prime number theorem. …This is the number of positive integers n that are relatively prime to n ; ϕ ( n ) is Euler’s totient. If ( a , n ) = 1 , then the Euler–Fermat theorem states that …
24: 5.5 Functional Relations
§5.5(iv) Bohr–Mollerup Theorem
25: 19.15 Advantages of Symmetry
Symmetry makes possible the reduction theorems of §19.29(i), permitting remarkable compression of tables of integrals while generalizing the interval of integration. …These reduction theorems, unknown in the Legendre theory, allow symbolic integration without imposing conditions on the parameters and the limits of integration (see §19.29(ii)). …
26: 23.23 Tables
05, and in the case of ( z ) the user may deduce values for complex z by application of the addition theorem (23.10.1). …
27: 27.11 Asymptotic Formulas: Partial Sums
where ( h , k ) = 1 , k > 0 . Letting x in (27.11.9) or in (27.11.11) we see that there are infinitely many primes p h ( mod k ) if h , k are coprime; this is Dirichlet’s theorem on primes in arithmetic progressions. …
27.11.15 lim x n x μ ( n ) ln n n = 1 .
Each of (27.11.13)–(27.11.15) is equivalent to the prime number theorem (27.2.3). The prime number theorem for arithmetic progressions—an extension of (27.2.3) and first proved in de la Vallée Poussin (1896a, b)—states that if ( h , k ) = 1 , then the number of primes p x with p h ( mod k ) is asymptotic to x / ( ϕ ( k ) ln x ) as x .
28: 27.12 Asymptotic Formulas: Primes
Prime Number Theorem
29: 1.10 Functions of a Complex Variable
Picard’s Theorem
§1.10(iv) Residue Theorem
Rouché’s Theorem
Lagrange Inversion Theorem
Extended Inversion Theorem
30: 1.4 Calculus of One Variable
Mean Value Theorem
Fundamental Theorem of Calculus
First Mean Value Theorem
Second Mean Value Theorem
§1.4(vi) Taylor’s Theorem for Real Variables