A linear ODE with constant coefficients can be easily solved once the roots of the auxiliary equation (or characteristic equation) are known. Some examples of this type ...
One significant advantage Mathematica provides is that it can symbolically compute derivatives. This means that when you specify Method->"Newton" and the function is ...
RSolve
(Built-in Mathematica Symbol) RSolve[eqn, a[n], n] solves a recurrence equation for a[n]. RSolve[{eqn_1, eqn_2, ...}, {a_1[n], a_2[n], ...}, n] solves a system of recurrence equations. RSolve[eqn, a[n_1, ...
GumbelDistribution[\[Alpha], \[Beta]] represents a Gumbel distribution with location parameter \[Alpha] and scale parameter \[Beta].
RiceDistribution[\[Alpha], \[Beta]] represents a Rice distribution with shape parameters \[Alpha] and \[Beta].RiceDistribution[m, \[Alpha], \[Beta]] represents a ...
InputForm[expr] prints as a version of expr suitable for input to Mathematica.
Due to the complex inner workings of the Notation Package it is helpful to outline some of the more advanced features and structures of the Mathematica front end and how they ...
Unicode: F768. Alias: Esc esc Esc. Letter-like form. Representation of the indicator for special character aliases in Mathematica. \[AliasIndicator] is an inactive ...
Unicode: 03DD. Aliases: Esc di Esc, Esc digamma Esc. Special Greek letter. Analogous to English w. Sometimes used to denote PolyGamma[x].
Unicode: 03DF. Aliases: Esc ko Esc, Esc koppa Esc. Special Greek letter. Analogous to English q. Appeared between π and ρ in early Greek alphabet; used for Greek numeral 90.