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| Donald L. Shirer, "Mathematica Spins Web Wizardry," Computing in Science and Engineering, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 9-10, March/April, 2002. | |||
| BibTex | x | ||
| @article{ 10.1109/MCSE.2002.10001, author = {Donald L. Shirer}, title = {Mathematica Spins Web Wizardry}, journal ={Computing in Science and Engineering}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, issn = {1521-9615}, year = {2002}, pages = {9-10}, doi = {http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/MCSE.2002.10001}, publisher = {IEEE Computer Society}, address = {Los Alamitos, CA, USA}, } | |||
| RefWorks Procite/RefMan/Endnote | x | ||
| TY - MGZN JO - Computing in Science and Engineering TI - Mathematica Spins Web Wizardry IS - 2 SN - 1521-9615 SP9 EP10 EPD - 9-10 A1 - Donald L. Shirer, PY - 2002 VL - 4 JA - Computing in Science and Engineering ER - | |||
Performing interactive mathematical calculations on the Internet without programming Perl scripts or Java applets? Sounds as fantastic as Harry Potter's universe, but Wolfram research's webMathematica delivers just that. This new product lets you access the power of the Mathematica kernel from a Web page with almost the ease of waving a magic wand.
Citation:
Donald L. Shirer, "Mathematica Spins Web Wizardry," Computing in Science and Engineering, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 9-10, March-April 2002, doi:10.1109/MCSE.2002.10001
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