Abstract
THE middle-aged mathematician is painfully aware that a knowledge of the treatises on analysis from which he was learning twenty or thirty years ago does not enable him to read today's researches, and he wonders what is the equipment that has taken the place of the facilities to his contemporaries laboured to acquire. The eager student, having mastered Hardy's “Pure Mathematics”, asks “What next?” To both inquirers, Prof. Titchmarsh's book, based on lectures delivered in London and Liverpool, presents an answer in the form of “some rather disconnected introductions to various branches of the theory of functions, both real and complex”.
The Theory of Functions.
By Prof. E. C. Titchmarsh. Pp. x + 454. (Oxford: Clarendon Press; London: Oxford University Press, 1933.) 25s. net.
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N., E. Technique of Mathematical Analysis. Nature 132, 546–548 (1933). https://doi.org/10.1038/132546a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/132546a0