queuebert 3 days ago

I think the course by Richard Fitzpatrick is a much better selection of content if you want to actually do computational physics: https://farside.ph.utexas.edu/teaching/329/329.pdf

  • redbluered 3 days ago

    Should be modernized to Python or similar.

    In 2026, I don't want to do numerical programming in C. That was fine 30 years ago, but today, I expect to have garbage collection or to be able to multiply a matrix as A×B.

    • queuebert 2 days ago

      If that's what you want, use Matlab. High-performance scientific computing is still using C, C++ +/- CUDA, or Fortran, with Rust a growing segment.

friendlyasparag 4 days ago

I took Mark Newman’s course some years ago. It was fantastic! Geared at sophomore/ junior year physics major — someone who had completed the basic intro sequence. I am sure this book is also great.

ktallett 4 days ago

I did a few courses across academic years that were based around this book and it's very handy skills to learn. Whilst perhaps not in the moment, it's a good introduction to implementing functions and equations, before you lead on to the next steps of specific functions and methods of analysis alongside hpc with parallelization.

lkm0 3 days ago

The matplotlib chapter seems fairly barebones but I remain in awe at this gorgeous latex work

  • emil-lp 3 days ago

    Isn't it a pretty standard book/memoir template?

    He could have invested in a Python syntax highlighter. I use minted, myself, but I'm sure there are many alternatives.

    • lkm0 2 days ago

      There's actually a source tex file bundled with exercises with a custom setup.tex which makes me believe the whole thing is bespoke. Might be wrong though

      https://websites.umich.edu/~mejn/cp2/exercises.html

      By the way, I use typst now, so I don't have to worry about highlighting anymore!

vectorcrumb 4 days ago

Could somebody provide some opinion on the book and/or accompanying course?

  • braedonwatkins 3 days ago

    I read most of the 1st edition (busy), I'm sure it hasn't changed much to the 2nd. I would say it's rather good at an introductory level to the subject!

    It definitely targets physics undergrads who have never programmed so if that's not you then you may feel friction during some chapters. If, like me, you are much more developed in programming than physics you might just want to do the exercises in the first few chapters to check your knowledge and move on to the good bits.

    If you're looking for something more rigorous I would bet [Numerical Recipes](https://numerical.recipes/) is better (I haven't read it but I want to; see "busy").

    • redbluered 3 days ago

      No, Numerical Recipes isn't better. Or worse. It's a different book on a different topic, with there topic very clearly advertised in the title.

      It's a series of... numerical recipes. Nice descriptions of many numerical algorithms sufficient to use them.

      It's not focused on physics. It's also not rigorous.

      The Sussman / Wisdom reference is rigorous.

      Why would you post about a book you haven't read?

HexDecOctBin 4 days ago

What physics do I need to know to follow this book?

  • griffzhowl 4 days ago

    Looks like not much. The book is about using Python to implement numerical methods, mainly about teaching the Python part, and that's all explained. You might be missing motivation if you don't know any physics, but even so, basic mechanics using differential equations seems to be enough to give context, at least for the earlier parts

  • mapt 4 days ago

    > Exercises by chapter

    Click on a chapter to download:

    Chapter 2: Python programming for physicists

    Chapter 3: Graphics and visualization

    Chapter 4: Accuracy and speed

    Chapter 5: Integrals and derivatives

    Chapter 6: Solution of linear and nonlinear equations

    Chapter 7: Fourier transforms

    Chapter 8: Ordinary differential equations

    Chapter 9: Partial differential equations

    Chapter 10: Random processes and Monte Carlo methods

    Chapter 11: Data science

  • analog31 3 days ago

    Just to give a bit of flavor, I was a math + physics major in the 80s. The physics curriculum had some oddly named courses such as "theoretical physics" that were not really physics courses but were meant to give you the math and computational background needed for the more advanced courses or for graduate work. The math was stuff that wasn't covered extensively enough in the math major courses, such as vector calculus.

  • kordlessagain 3 days ago

    Weber's Electrodynamics.

    • elteto 3 days ago

      Only after working through Rudin’s Analysis first.

Morpheus_Matrix 3 days ago

[flagged]

  • analog31 3 days ago

    I was a math + physics major in college, in the 80s. Thankfully, our differential equations course covered both analytical and numerical integration. We also took a course in the math department called "numerical analysis" that got further into it and also dealt with the foibles of floating point arithmetic.

    For us, it was all in FORTRAN.

inzlab 3 days ago

computation will revolutionize physics.

  • analog31 3 days ago

    I hope that's sarcastic. Physics is the original computational science.