For the practicing programmer with little time to spare, Essential C++ offers a fast-track
to learning and working with C++ on the job. This book is specifically designed to bring
you up to speed in a short amount of time. It focuses on the elements of C++
programming that you are most likely to encounter and examines features and techniques
that help solve real-world programming challenges.
Written for engineering and computer science students and practicing engineers, this book provides the fundamental applications and mathematical techniques of signal processing. Topics covered include programming in MATLAB, filters, networking, and parallel processing.
MATLAB is introduced and used to solve numerous examples in the book.
Companion software available
In addition, a set of MATLAB M-files is available on a CD bound in the book.
Zero-order-hold
Intended for a senior-level course on the analysis and design of digital control systems, the text is also useful for graduate students and practicing engineers who are learning state-space design techniques.
Upper gain margin
Intended for a senior-level course on the analysis and design of digital control systems, the text is also useful for graduate students and practicing engineers who are learning state-space design techniques.
是一本介紹java基礎(chǔ)應(yīng)用的好書
Java For Artists targets both the undergraduate computer science or information technology student and the practicing programmer. It is both an introductory-level textbook and trade book.
As a textbook it employs learning objectives, skill-building exercises, suggested projects, and self-test questions to reinforce the learning experience. The projects offered range from the easy to the extremely challenging. It covers all the topics you’d expect to find in an introductory Java programming textbook and then some.
As a trade book it goes purposefully deeper into topics cut short or avoided completely in most introductory textbooks. Its coverage of advanced GUI programming techniques, network programming and object-oriented theory will enable you to take your skills to a higher level.
Design of Integrated Circuits for Optical Communications deals with the design of high-speed integrated circuits for optical communication systems. Written for both students and practicing engineers, the book systematically takes the reader from basic concepts to advanced topics, establishing both rigor and intuition. The text emphasizes analysis and design in modern VLSI technologies, particularly CMOS, and presents numerous broadband circuit techniques. Leading researcher Behzad Razavi is also the author of Design of Analog CMOS Integrated Circuits.
This book is intended for the graduate or advanced undergraduate
engineer. The primary motivation for developing the text was to present a
complete tutorial of phase-locked loops with a consistent notation. I believe
this is critical for the practicing engineer who uses the text as a self-study
guide.
Spread-spectrum communication is a core area within the field of digital
communication. Originally used in military networks as countermeasures against
the threats of jamming and interception, spread-spectrum systems are now widely
used in commercial applications and are part of several wireless and mobile
communication standards. Although spread-spectrum communication is a staple
topic in textbooks on digital communication, its treatment is usually cursory. This
book is designed to provide a more intensive examination of the subject that is
suitable for graduate students and practicing engineers with a solid background
in the theory of digital communication. As the title indicates, this book stresses
principles rather than specific current or planned systems, which are described in
manyotherbooks.My goal in this bookis to providea concisebut lucidexplanation
of the fundamentals of spread-spectrum systems with an emphasis on theoretical
principles.
Despite the development of a now vast body of knowledge known as
modern control theory, and despite some spectacular applications of this
theory to practical situations, it is quite clear that much of the theory has
yet to find application, and many practical control problems have yet to find
a theory which will successfully deal with them. No book of course can
remedy the situation at this time. But the aim of this book is to construct
one of many bridges that are still required for the student and practicing
control engineer between the familiar classical control results and those of
modern control theory.