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Ask HN: Math book recommendation for a long detached engineering major?

4 pointsby curious16over 2 years ago
As someone who has done an engineering major in electronics and communication almost a decade back, have used calculus, matrix algebra, some probability for doing well in exams, but, have since then have not used them extensively, what can be good math book recommendations?<p>The engineering degree never taught proofs or logical deduction as such. Only the applied part was taught. But, now, I want to learn about problem solving, logical proof writing and higher math like linear algebra, probability, statistics, analysis, abstract algebra, etc. Mostly on my own and using online QnA forums. Problem solving and logical deduction is the ultimate skill I am after.<p>I would like some suggestions on that regard. The AoPS books seemed too easy for me and I am losing interest in them. I may require something a bit harder to keep me hooked. Solution manuals are a bonus to have, if at all possible.

2 comments

jjgreenover 2 years ago
G.H. Hardy, A Course of Pure Mathematics. Old but <i>beautiful</i>, redoes results which you may well know but with rigour.
debanjan16over 2 years ago
I have a few in mind:<p>1. Journey into Mathematics by Rotman<p>2. Street Fighting Mathematics by Sanjoy Mahajan