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If you don't know the math and think you'll learn what you need as you go along, then you'd better have a mathematician handy to help you out with that, because this book will leave you hanging.if you attend MIT or another school with a HEAVY math emphasis, then this book will serve you well. Given this book's steep mathematical requirements (discrete math, graph theory, combinatorics, and matrices), it's lack of explanations / demonstrations, and, from my experience, it's use in computer science courses without a steep math pre-requisite this book is inappropriately titled and difficult to use. If you already know the math and just want to apply it, then this book will be of tremendous use to you. This book demonstrates the growing divide between mathematics and computer science. If you've had nothing but Calculus, then this book may leave you enraged and confused with a strong preference for heuristics.As it stands I hope the third edition is much improved, for the sake of students everywhere, and I wonder why my class (fall 2009) did not use it instead. Yes, computer science is closer to physics than biology or chemistry when it comes to math usage. Yes, mathematics are vital to the understanding and practice of any science. However, this does not make every aspiring computer scientist a mathematician.
It does not describe any strategy to begin in a useful manner. It does not provide any sample problem/solution breakdowns. This book is readable. It gives few examples with limited explanation. All of which I feel would benefit my learning methods greatly.If this book had an introduction to "Introduction to Algorithms". I gave it two stars because of how I feel: the alt text reads "I don't like it."I tried with significant effort to read and understand this book. It does not give an in depth explanation of analysis, in my case, of recurrence.
Highly recommended. It's so good that if you study computer science, you'd want this book on your bookshelf for reference even if no course explicitly requires it. This is the best algorithms book ever. It covers the whole gamut of topics from sorting to graphs to NP-complete problems.
My son is a Computer Engineer student, he found this book very useful and valuable support in this subject.
It's not dependent on some concrete programming language , and examples are written in pseudocode. Great wide area covering algorithms book. It's covering many areas , and gives good starting ( sometimes not just start ) point for investigation of some concrete problem.
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