Date: Thu, 07 Nov 1996 19:09:40 GMT Server: NCSA/1.5 Content-type: text/html Last-modified: Wed, 18 Sep 1996 22:43:38 GMT Content-length: 5737
Department of Computer Sciences
University of Wisconsin-Madison
1210 West Dayton Street
Madison, Wisconsin 53706-1685 USA
Office hours, fall '96 (when in town): WF11-12, R14:30-15:30Iso Schoenberg worked here in Madison *), from 1966 until his death in 1990.
c.v.
email: deboor@cs.wisc.edu
telephone: (608) 263-7308, 3-2661
fax: (608) 262-9777
My schedule for fall '96. I am teaching CS 412 and MA 313.
Look for some of my former or present students.
Selected recent articles on approximation theory written at UW are available by anonymous ftp from ftp.cs.wisc.edu/Approx. The read.me file provides access to individual files there at the click of a button (it's a clickable version of the read.me file there). The (small) subset of these (co)authored by me are clickable in here.
Click here for a
list of errata for the third edition of [Conte and de Boor,
Click Journal of Approximation Theory (published by Academic Press) for information about that journal (including recently accepted and published papers) as well as for email and postal addresses of many approximators and much, much more. Ditto for Constructive Approximation (published by Springer-Verlag). Ditto for East Journal on Approximations. Search their tables of content, singly or combined, (and thank Paul Nevai for this handy tool). There is also Approximation down under and Amos Ron's list of homepages of approximators .
A spline bibliography is available.
For links to various publishers, journals, people, resources, see the Ilas Information Center (IIC).
For an organized introduction into the joys of vi, see viva_vi!. There are also on-screen tutorials.
Click here for a great picture of Hermite. The same place also contains useful information about html. But the html-primer might be even better.
For a very unusual and ever_changing home page, try David Griffeath's Primordial Soup Kitchen.
For various interesting information, see odds and ends , and thank Allan Pinkus at pinkus@techunix.technion.ac.il or Paul Nevai if you find any of it useful. Also, check out Paul Nevai's way to make his mathematical output available.
Check here for information about MATH/CS 717..
Click here for information about Numerical Analysis here at CS .