Very interesting. I would point out that it is a shame that there is nothing on Integral Domains, quite possibly because Sage has not that much useful to say about them per se (or UFDs or Euc. Domains...)?
- kcrisman On Apr 15, 1:16 pm, Rob Beezer <[email protected]> wrote: > I've about finished up a serious run of using Sage in a course about > rings, domains, vector spaces, fields, posets, Boolean algebra and > Galois theory. I've learned a lot myself about Sage, and will > probably greatly spruce-up these resources when I use them a second > time. But I though folks might find these materials interesting as a > way to see what Sage is capable of in a course like this. The > exercises are perhaps the best and easiest place to look - they are > designed to complement Judson's open-source textbook, which has a link > below. > > The worksheets are mostly random tinkering in class, then saved and > posted. However, the Galois theory worksheet was pre-built and is > somewhat annotated. > > If you see better or easier ways to employ Sage, I'd love to hear > about it. At this point, I'm not too concerned about typos or > anything like that. > > Thanks to everybody who has worked on all this code - it really has > enhanced this course. I tell the students: "You've gone where no Math > 434 course has ever gone before." ;-) > > Rob > > Exercises:http://buzzard.ups.edu/courses/2010spring/m434-sage-exercises.pdf > > Corresponding Textbook:http://abstract.pugetsound.edu/ > > In-class Worksheets (links in the middle of > page):http://buzzard.ups.edu/courses/2010spring/m434s2010.html -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sage-edu" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/sage-edu?hl=en.
