Integrated into the Mathematica system are powerful functions for analyzing large volumes of discrete and integer data—often conveniently specified using Mathematica's ...
Mathematica 7 represents another major achievement in Mathematica's long history of innovation in mathematics and algorithms. Building on the broad capabilities of ...
Some operators used in basic arithmetic and algebra. Note that the for ∖[Cross] is distinguished by being drawn slightly smaller than the × for ∖[Times]. Interpretation of ...
Patterns are used throughout Mathematica to represent classes of expressions. A simple example of a pattern is the expression f[x_]. This pattern represents the class of ...
Mathematica contains the world's largest collection of number theoretic functions, many based on specially developed algorithms.
Although Diophantine equations provide classic examples of undecidability, Mathematica in practice succeeds in solving a remarkably wide range of such equations—automatically ...
Mathematica contains hundreds of original algorithms for computing integer functions involving integers of any size.
Lists are central constructs in Mathematica, used to represent collections, arrays, sets, and sequences of all kinds. Lists can have any structure and size, and can routinely ...
VerifyConvergence is an option to Sum, NSum, and similar functions that specifies whether convergence checking should be done.