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New in 6.0: Formatting & Styling   (Mathematica Guide)
Version 6.0 added hundreds of new options for formatting and styling —supporting Version 6.0's major advances in dynamic interactivity, interoperability, interface ...
Multiplicative Number Theory   (Mathematica Guide)
Building on its broad strengths in mathematics in general, and in special functions in particular, Mathematica provides a unique level of support for multiplicative number ...
FindFit   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
FindFit[data, expr, pars, vars] finds numerical values of the parameters pars that make expr give a best fit to data as a function of vars. The data can have the form {{x_1, ...
PossibleZeroQ   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
PossibleZeroQ[expr] gives True if basic symbolic and numerical methods suggest that expr has value zero, and gives False otherwise.
Some Mathematical Functions   (Mathematica Tutorial)
Mathematica includes a very large collection of mathematical functions. "Mathematical Functions" gives the complete list. Here are a few of the common ones. Some common ...
Casoratian   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
Casoratian[{y_1, y_2, ...}, n] gives the Casoratian determinant for the sequences y_1, y_2, ... depending on n.Casoratian[eqn, y, n] gives the Casoratian determinant for the ...
Why You Do Not Usually Need to Know ...   (Mathematica Tutorial)
Most of the documentation provided for Mathematica is concerned with explaining what Mathematica does, not how it does it. But the purpose of this is to say at least a little ...
NHoldAll   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
NHoldAll is an attribute which specifies that none of the arguments to a function should be affected by N.
NumberFieldFundamentalUnits   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
NumberFieldFundamentalUnits[a] gives a list of fundamental units for the field \[DoubleStruckCapitalQ][a] generated by the algebraic number a.
Eliminating Variables   (Mathematica Tutorial)
When you write down a set of simultaneous equations in Mathematica, you are specifying a collection of constraints between variables. When you use Solve, you are finding ...
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