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GNU Octave Beginner's Guide
By :

Jesper Schmidt Hansen holds a Ph.D. in soft material science and is currently doing research in the field of nanofluidics and dynamics at Roskilde University, Denmark. He has been using GNU Octave on a daily basis for many years, both as a student and later as a researcher. The applications have varied from solving partial and ordinary differential equations, simple data plotting, data generation for other applications, dynamical system investigations, and advanced data analysis.
Firstly, I wish to thank the reviewers. They have been a great help and their many (at times overwhelmingly many) comments and hints have improved the manuscript considerably.
I have received encouragement and good ideas from everyone at the Department of Science, Systems and Models, Roskilde University. Especially, I want to thank Professor Jeppe Dyre from the Danish National Research Foundation centre "Glass and Time" for giving me the opportunity to finish the book in the last phase of the writing.
Also, I have found Octave's official mailing list very useful. Unlike many other user groups, there is a very constructive and helpful atmosphere here. I thank everyone who has submitted questions and all those that have replied.
I now realize that having a one year old child, a full time job, as well as writing a book is not really an ideal cocktail. I must thank Signe Anthon for her tremendous support and patience during the writing of this book. When I signed the contract with Packt Publishing, I was happy finally to be able to make a contribution to the open source community—Signe's contribution is just as big as mine!
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