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Richard Johnsonbaugh

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Richard F. Johnsonbaugh (born 1941)[1] is an American mathematician and computer scientist. His interests include discrete mathematics and the history of mathematics. He is the author of several textbooks.

Johnsonbaugh earned a bachelor's degree in mathematics from Yale University, and then moved to the University of Oregon for graduate study.[2] He completed his Ph.D. at Oregon in 1969. His dissertation, I. Classical Fundamental Groups and Covering Space Theory in the Setting of Cartan and Chevalley; II. Spaces and Algebras of Vector-Valued Differentiable Functions, was supervised by Bertram Yood.[3] He also has a second master's degree in computer science from the University of Illinois at Chicago.[2]

He is currently professor emeritus at De Paul University.[2]

Books

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  • Discrete Mathematics (MacMillan, 1984; 8th ed., Pearson, 2018)[4]
  • Foundations of Mathematical Analysis (with W. E. Pfaffenberger, Marcel Dekker, 1981; Dover, 2010)[5]
  • Applications Programming in ANSI C (with Martin Kalin, Prentice Hall, 1993; 3rd ed., 1996)
  • Object-oriented Programming in C (with Martin Kalin, Prentice Hall, 1995)
  • Algorithms (with Marcus Schaefer, Prentice Hall, 2003)[6]

References

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  1. ^ Library of congress catalog entry, retrieved 2019-04-11.
  2. ^ a b c Author biography from Discrete Mathematics (8th ed.)
  3. ^ Richard Johnsonbaugh at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  4. ^ Review of Discrete Mathematics:
    • Charles F. Kelemen (1987), American Mathematical Monthly, JSTOR 2322865, doi:10.2307/2322865
  5. ^ Reviews of Foundations of Mathematical Analysis:
  6. ^ Review of Algorithms:
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