Physics 410: Computational Physics: Online Course Resources
This document is currently under construction
Note: ``PS'' indicates a Postscript document, ``PDF'' indicates Adobe
portable document format,
Index
UNIX and General Information
Emacs (Text Editing [and more!])
- XEmacs.org: The home page for the XEmacs project,
containing links to a wealth of information about XEmacs.
- XEmacs User's Guide (local copy) (PDF).
Note: This manual is nearly 400 pages in length, so you may want to think carefully
before you print it!
Searching the Web
- Google. The premier Web search-engine (at least for
the time being!)
Creating HTML documents
-
A Beginner's Guide to HTML (from NCSA)
-
A More Complete Guide to HTML (from UBC).
An older (c 1994-1995) NCSA guide which I downloaded so that
browsing would be snappier. Still a useful guide/reference for the
"basics" of HTML.
- Choose the Composing and editing Web pages
option from Netscape's Help menu (you may have to first choose
Help Contents from the main menu).
- One of the easiest and most powerful ways of learning HTML is to
use the Page Source feature from Netscape's View menu.
Find a Web document with a layout or feature you wish to emulate, select
Page Source from the View and then examine the source
(which will appear in a separate window) to see how things are done.
Maple (Symbolic Manipulation)
- Maple: Maple Home Page including links to various Maple Web sites.
NOTE: The current version of maple is Maple 6.
In the course, however, we will be using the previous version, Maple V.
Graphing (XY plots)
FORTRAN 77 Programming
C Programming
Numerical Algorithms
Scientific Visualization
Other Computational Physics/Science Courses & Programs
Other Computational Physics/Science Resources
General Physics Resources