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Steven Holzner

Author of Physics For Dummies

146 Works 2,697 Members 20 Reviews

About the Author

Steven Holzner, PhD, was on the faculty at Cornell University and MIT
Image credit: via legacy.com

Works by Steven Holzner

Physics For Dummies (2005) 227 copies, 1 review
Quantum Physics For Dummies (2009) 152 copies, 3 reviews
Physics I For Dummies (2011) 127 copies, 1 review
Ajax for Dummies (2006) 97 copies
Eclipse (2004) 93 copies, 1 review
Differential Equations for Dummies (2008) 92 copies, 1 review
Ant: The Definitive Guide (2005) 81 copies, 2 reviews
Physics II For Dummies (2010) 77 copies
Design Patterns For Dummies (2006) — Author — 75 copies, 1 review
Physics Workbook For Dummies (2007) 67 copies, 1 review
Inside XML (Inside) (2000) 66 copies, 1 review
Eclipse Cookbook (2004) 62 copies
Joomla! for Dummies (2009) 47 copies
Secrets of RSS (2006) 47 copies
Beginning Ruby on Rails (2006) 45 copies
Inside XSLT (2001) 40 copies
Java 2 Black Book (2001) 31 copies
Spring Into PHP 5 (2005) 31 copies
Ajax Bible (2007) 30 copies
How Dell Does It (2006) 25 copies
Real World XML (2003) 22 copies
Advanced Assembly Language (1991) 21 copies
Google Docs 4 Everyone (2009) 21 copies
Inside JavaScript (2002) 14 copies, 1 review
Zoho For Dummies (2009) 14 copies
C Programming (1991) 12 copies
Javascript Complete (1998) 10 copies
C With Assembly Language (1989) 10 copies
Advanced Assembly Language on the IBM PC (1987) 8 copies, 1 review
Advanced Basic (1991) 6 copies
Struts : essential skills (2004) 5 copies
Java 2. Das Buch (2000) 5 copies
Visual C Programming (1993) 4 copies
Os2 Assembly Language (1990) 3 copies
Visual Basic (1991) 3 copies, 1 review
C++ (2001) 3 copies
XML (2001) 2 copies
XSLT par la pratique (2002) 2 copies
Inside XML (2001) 2 copies
Advanced Visual C++5 (1997) 2 copies
Java Workshop Programming (1996) 2 copies
Advanced Visual C 4 (1996) 2 copies
Total Perl (2001) 1 copy
Mastering Netscape Ifc (1997) 1 copy
Quantum Physics for Dummies 1 copy, 1 review
Basic Powertools (1990) 1 copy
Sekrety RSS (2007) 1 copy
Java I.I (1997) 1 copy
C++ Gran Cru (2005) 1 copy
Visual J (1997) 1 copy
Java徹底硏究 (2000) 1 copy
JAVA 2 1 copy

Tagged

2012-0205 (27) 2014-0913 (27) 3100SS (12) ajax (28) computer (44) computer science (22) computers (65) computing (19) Dummies (22) ebook (47) eclipse (24) For Dummies (36) internet (16) java (51) math (40) non-fiction (91) own (17) paperback (13) PDF (11) perl (33) physics (107) programming (189) reference (22) RSS (11) science (64) technology (14) to-read (43) web (23) web development (12) XML (35)

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

21 reviews
This book is not for dummies. If it were presented as a supplement to a quantum physics textbook, I'd give it four stars. As a "for Dummies" book, I'm afraid it's a failure. I came into this book just having finished [b:String Theory For Dummies|10399015|String Theory For Dummies|Andrew Zimmerman Jones|http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51MeQK9gINL._SL75_.jpg|15302931] by [a:Andrew Zimmerman Jones|2943202|Andrew Zimmerman Jones|http://photo.goodreads.com/authors/1252952533p2/2943202.jpg], show more which I highly recommend. String Theory for Dummies is a wonderful introduction to the very strange universe of string theory. In contrast, Quantum Physics for Dummies is an almost indecipherable, math-laden, incomprehensible "introduction" to quantum physics. The introduction states that you need a good background in college calculus including differential equations and at least a year of college physics to understand this book. The introduction does not lie. I have all these qualifications (and I'd add matrices mathematics to the requirements) and I still could not follow a lot of the math. My main problem with the book was that the author did a poor job of connecting all this math to the real world. There was very, very little qualitative discussion of quantum physics, and 90 % of the book was spent solving equations, but failing to tie the resulting equation to any physical object or phenomenon. All that said, it's not a bad book, it's just not appropriate for the "For Dummies" series. show less
Differential Equations for Dummies is another book in the Dummies series and as such is made for the common man or common woman as the case may be. Dr. Steven Holzner explains the subject with panache and skill. Some of the parts can be skipped. For instance, the author discusses how to do Euler’s Method with a short program written in the Java Programming Language.

The author assumes some prior knowledge of Calculus, but this is a sensible thing to expect. If you are rusty with Calculus show more the author does explain some of its rules and techniques, but he dives in pretty quickly. The book is written in plain English and is sprinkled here and there with humor. It mostly comes in the form of a comic panel, but sometimes he comes up with an imaginary situation where you are the only person who can use Differential Equations, even though you are surrounded by Engineers and Scientists.

I do have some problems with this book but they aren’t that extreme. First and foremost, there are no workable problems. This might be because of the nature of the text, but I am not quite certain. The second is that the book contains links to websites and I don’t know how long they will last. Although, I suppose if you enter ‘Differential Equation Solver’ into your favorite Search Engine you will be pointed to some good resources.
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assumes significant java programming knowledge and experience. geared towards java developers, not necessarily buildmeisters. there was less about ANT and more about things that interact with ANT than i expected (probably because a book restricted to ANT only would be about 40 pages long) and those other things that ANT interacts with are heavily influenced by the author's preferences (ie, java, junit, CVS). assumes junit knowledge - i had trouble executing the junit examples; the code in show more the examples seemed bad. at least i couldn't get it to work as written. i managed to figure out how to run it with several hours of googling, but the book wasn't helpful. show less

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Statistics

Works
146
Members
2,697
Popularity
#9,524
Rating
½ 3.3
Reviews
20
ISBNs
287
Languages
12

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