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Babbage's Calculating Engines : Being a Collection of Papers Relating to them; their History and Construction

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - Mathematics series
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The famous and prolific nineteenth-century mathematician, engineer and inventor Charles Babbage (1791–1871) was an early pioneer of computing.

He planned several calculating machines, but none was built in his lifetime.

On his death his youngest son, Henry P. Babbage, was charged with the task of completing an unfinished volume of papers on the machines, which was finally published in 1889 and is reissued here.

The papers, by a variety of authors, were collected from journals including The Philosophical Magazine, The Edinburgh Review and Scientific Memoirs.

They relate to the construction and potential application of Charles Babbage's calculating engines, notably the Difference Engine and the more complex Analytical Engine, which was to be programmed using punched cards.

The book also includes correspondence with members of scientific societies, as well as proceedings, catalogues and drawings.

Included is a complete catalogue of the drawings of the Analytical Engine.

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£36.99
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108000967 / 9781108000963
Paperback / softback
510.284
20/05/2010
United Kingdom
388 pages, Worked examples or Exercises
210 x 297 mm, 930 grams