As more and more engineering departments, and companies choose to use Python, this book provides an essential introduction to this open-source, free to use language. Expressly designed to support first-year engineering students, this book covers engineering and scientific calculations, Python basics and structured programming.
Based on extensive teaching experience, the text uses practical problem solving as a vehicle to teach Python as a programming language. By learning computing fundamentals, in an engaging and hands-on manner, it enables the reader to apply engineering and scientific methods to Python, focusing this general language to the needs of engineers and the problems they are required to solve on a daily basis. Rather than inundating students with complex terminology, the book is designed with a levelling approach in mind, enabling students at all levels to gain experience and understanding of Python. It covers topics such as structure programming, graphics, matrix operations, algebraic equations and differential equations. A comprehensive chapter on working with data brings the book to a close.
This book is an essential guide to Python, which will be relevant to all engineers, particularly undergraduate students in their first year. It will also be of interest to professionals and graduate students looking to hone their programming skills, and to situate Python in an engineering and scientific context.
About the Author: David E. Clough is Professor Emeritus at the University of Colorado. He has experience in a wide array of programming languages and computing tools and has applied his expertise through his teaching, research, and industrial applications. Over his career, Clough has taught hundreds of short courses to practicing professionals on applied computing and problem-solving.
Steven C. Chapra is the Emeritus Professor and Louis Berger Chair in Civil and Environmental Engineering at Tufts University. Before joining Tufts, he worked for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and taught at Texas A&M University, the University of Colorado, and Imperial College London. He is a Fellow and Life Member of the American Society of Civil Engineering (ASCE) and has received several awards for his scholarly and academic contributions, including the Rudolph Hering Medal (ASCE), and the Meriam-Wiley Distinguished Author Award (American Society for Engineering Education). As a strong proponent of continuing education, he has taught over 90 workshops around the world for professionals on numerical methods, computer programming, and environmental modeling.