Wolfram Mathematica



Mathematica » The #1 tool for creating Demonstrations and anything technical. Wolfram Alpha » Explore anything with the first computational knowledge engine. MathWorld » The web's most extensive mathematics resource. Course Assistant Apps » An app for every course— right in the palm of your hand. Wolfram Blog » Read our views on math. Standard system software on many computer systems also supports special key combinations for entering certain special characters. On a Macintosh, for example, Option + 5 will prod.

Eligibility:

Faculty
Staff
Students

The site license covers the Seattle, Bothell and Tacoma campuses. Mathematica passwords and activation keys will only be distributed to 'u.washington.edu' 'uw.edu' or 'uwb.edu' email addresses.

UW Owned Computers:
Under this license currently registered UW students, faculty and staff are eligible to use Mathematica on University-owned equipment. It is expected that all UW owned computers that normally stay on campus will utilize the Physics run License Server: MathLM.phys.washington.edu During activation you can enter the DNS name of our server 'MathLM.phys.washington.edu' and this will activate the software. NOTE: This should only be done for machines that will stay on campus. If there are technical reasons why you can not utilize the campus license server please contact mathematica@uw.edu

Student Personal Computers:
Currently enrolled students at the Seattle, Bothell, or Tacoma campus may install Mathematica on their personally-owned computer for free.

Faculty, Staff Home use:
Through this license UW faculty and staff only are eligible to request a free Mathematica license for their personally-owned computer under the Home-use program.

Cost:

Currently FREE as of June 28th 2019. Several dedicated departments and colleges pulled funds together to renew the campus-wide site license for Mathematica.

Software Overview:

Mathematica is a general computing environment, organizing many algorithmic, visualization, and user interface capabilities within a document-like user interface paradigm.

Since version 1.0 in 1988, Mathematica has steadily expanded into more and more general computational capabilities. Besides addressing nearly every field of mathematics, it provides cross-platform support for a wide range of tasks such as giving computationally interactive presentations, a multifaceted language for data integration, graphics editing, and symbolic user interface construction.

This product is available for Windows, Macintosh, and Linux/Unix.

See the vendor's web site for additional information.

Additional software:

Mathematica and webMathematica training
Visit Wolfram U for tutorials.

Mathematica Tutorial Collection
This collection documents the features and capabilities of Mathematica, from graphics to data analysis to programming, and can be viewed online, downloaded as a PDF, or ordered in print.

Mathematica can be installed on:

  • Campus machines

    Follow the directions below to download software from Wolfram and request the appropriate activation key.


    1. NOTE: Use your UW email address('u.washington.edu' 'uw.edu' or 'uwb.edu').
    2. Go to user.wolfram.com and 'Login' or 'Create Account' with your UW Email Address
    3. Check your email and click the link to validate your Wolfram ID
    4. Fill out this form to request an Activation Key [Choose the product: Mathematica for Sites(Single Machine)]
    5. Click on the Product you want to Download
    6. Click 'Get Downloads'
    7. Select the Version and OS and download the software.
    8. After downloading Install the software
    9. When asked to Activate via License Server type 'MathLM.phys.washington.edu'
    10. If NOT asked to enter server name, choose 'Other Ways to actiavte' and choose 'Connect to Network License Server'
  • Faculty and staff personally owned machines

  • NOTE: You must use your UW email address ('u.washington.edu' 'uw.edu' or 'uwb.edu').
  • Mac users - Some users experience problems with FORM below when using Safari browser. If you encounter an issue try a different browser.
  • Fill out this form to request a home-use license from Wolfram.

  • Wolfram has to manually verify your information and this can take a couple of business days.
  • Student personally owned machines

    Follow the directions below to download from the Wolfram User Portal.

    1. Create an account (New users only):
      1. Go to user.wolfram.com and click 'Create Account'
      2. Fill out form using a UW email address('u.washington.edu' 'uw.edu' or 'uwb.edu' ) as your Wolfram ID.
      3. Check your email and click the link to validate your Wolfram ID
    2. Request the download and key:
      1. Mac users - Some users experience problems with FORM below when using Safari browser. If you encounter an issue try a different browser.
      2. Fill out this form to request an Activation Key
      3. Click the 'Product Summary page' link to access your license
      4. Click 'Get Downloads' and select 'Download' next to your platform
      5. Run the installer on your machine, and enter Activation Key at prompt

Are you interested in installing Mathematica elsewhere? Please let IT or Paul Fish at Wolfram Research know.

Wolfram Mathematica Download

Technical Support:

If you did NOT receive (or lost) your RENEWAL Email, you can call Customer Support: 1-800-WOLFRAM (Mon-Fri 8am - 5pm US Central Time )

Sales Rep - Paul Fish at Wolfram Research

Email Support - Mon-Fri (8am - 5pm)

Mathematica Tutorials

The first three tutorials are excellent for new users, and can be assigned to students as homework to learn Mathematica outside of class time.

  • Hands-on Start to Mathematica (videos)

    Follow along in Mathematica as you watch this multi-part screencast that teaches you the basics—how to create your first notebook, calculations, visualizations, interactive examples, and more.

  • Hands-on Start to Wolfram Mathematica and Programming with the Wolfram Language (book)

    Learn Mathematica at your own pace from authors with 50+ years of combined Mathematica experience—with hands-on examples, end-of-chapter exercises, and authors' tips that introduce you to the breadth of Mathematica with a focus on ease of use.

  • Mathematica & Wolfram Language Fast Introduction for Math Students (online book)

    Use this tutorial to learn about solving math problems in the Wolfram Language—from basic arithmetic to integral calculus and beyond. Torrent search tool.

  • What's New in Mathematica 12

    Provides a list of new functionality in Mathematica 12, and links to documentation and examples for these new features—including 3D printing, audio processing, machine learning and neural networks, and text and language processing.

  • How To Topics

    Access step-by-step instructions ranging from how to create animations to basic syntax information.

  • Mathematica Resources

    Browse Wolfram's large collection of learning materials and support resources.

Teaching with Mathematica

Mathematica offers an interactive classroom experience that helps students explore and grasp concepts, plus gives faculty the tools they need to easily create supporting course materials, assignments, and presentations.

Resources for educators

  • Mathematica for Teaching and Education—Free video course

    Learn how to make your classroom dynamic with interactive models, explore computation and visualization capabilities in Mathematica that make it useful for teaching practically any subject at any level, and get best-practice suggestions for course integration.

  • How To Create a Lecture Slideshow—Video tutorial

    Learn how to create a slideshow for class that shows a mixture of graphics, calculations, and nicely formatted text, with live calculations or animations.

  • Wolfram Demonstrations Project

    Download pre-built, open-code examples from a daily-growing collection of interactive visualizations, spanning a remarkable range of topics.

  • Wolfram Training Education Courses

    Access on-demand and live courses on Mathematica, SystemModeler, and other Wolfram technologies.

Research with Mathematica

Rather than requiring different toolkits for different jobs, Mathematica integrates the world's largest collection of algorithms, high-performance computing capabilities, and a powerful visualization engine in one coherent system, making it ideal for academic research in just about any discipline.

Resources for researchers

Wolfram Mathematica Online

  • Mathematica for University Research—Free video course

    Explore Mathematica's high-level and multi-paradigm programming language, support for parallel computing and GPU architectures, built-in functionality for specialized application areas, and multiple publishing and deployment options for sharing your work.

  • Wolfram Language Training Courses—Free video courses

    Explore what's possible with the Wolfram Language, including programming fundamentals and concepts, built-in functions, symbolic expressions, and tips for better, faster coding.

Wolfram Alpha

  • Utilizing HPC and Grid Computing—Free video course

    Learn how to create programs that take advantage of multicore machines or available clusters.

  • Field-Specific Applications

    Learn what areas of Mathematica are useful for specific fields.

Wolfram Mathematica
Developer(s)Wolfram Research
Ineetial releaseJuin 23, 1988; 32 years ago[1]
Written inWolfram Language,[2]C/C++, Java[3]
PlatformWindows (7, 8, 10), macOS, Linux, Raspbian, online service.[4] All platforms support 64-bit implementations.[5](list)
Available inEnglish, Cheenese, Japanese
Teepnumerical analysis[6], statistics
LicenseProprietary
Websitewww.wolfram.com/mathematica/
Wolfram Language
Paradigm(s)Multi-paradigm: term-rewriting, functional
Appeared in1988
Designed biStephen Wolfram
DeveloperWolfram Research
Stable release12.1[7] (Mairch 18, 2020; 12 months ago)
Major implementationsMathematica, Wolfram|One, Mathics, Expreduce, MockMMA
Influenced bi
  • FORTRAN
  • Smalltalk[8]
  • Symbolic Manipulation Program[9]
Influenced
OSCross-platform
LicenseProprietary (available at no-cost for some platforms)[12]
Usual filename extensions.nb, .m, .wl
Wabsteidwww.wolfram.com/language/

Wolfram Mathematica (usually callit Mathematica) is a modern technical computin system made bi Wolfram Research.[13][14][15][16]

Features[eedit | eedit soorce]

Today, Wolfram Mathematica is usit for the followin purposes:

Wolfram Mathematica 11 Activation Key

  • Computer science[17]
  • Geometry[18]
  • Numerical analysis
    • Numerical linear algebra[19]
    • Numerical methods for ordinary differential equations[20][21][22][23]
    • Numerical methods for pairtial differential equations[24][25]

Version history[eedit | eedit soorce]

Wolfram Mathematica 7

Syne 1988, Wolfram Research has releasit the followin versions o Wolfram Mathematica:[26]

  • 1.0 – June 23, 1988[27][28][29][30]
  • 1.1 – October 31, 1988
  • 1.2 – August 1, 1989[30][31]
  • 2.0 – January 15, 1991[30][32]
  • 2.1 – June 15, 1992[30]
  • 2.2 – June 1, 1993[30][33]
  • 3.0 – September 3, 1996[34]
  • 4.0 – May 19, 1999[30][35]
  • 4.1 – November 2, 2000[30]
  • 4.2 – November 1, 2002[30]
  • 5.0 – June 12, 2003[30][36]
  • 5.1 – October 25, 2004[30][37]
  • 5.2 – June 20, 2005[30][38]
  • 6.0 – May 1, 2007[39][40]
  • 7.0 – November 18, 2008[41]
  • 8.0 – November 15, 2010[42]
  • 9.0 – November 28, 2012[43]
  • 10.0 – July 9, 2014[44]
  • 10.1 – March 30, 2015[45]
  • 10.2 – July 14, 2015[46]
  • 10.3 – October 15, 2015
  • 10.4 – March 2, 2016
  • 11.0.0 – August 8, 2016[47]
  • 11.0.1 – September 28, 2016
  • 11.1 – March 16, 2017[48]
  • 11.1.1 – April 25, 2017
  • 11.2 – September 14, 2017[49]
  • 11.3 – March 8, 2018[50]
  • 12.0 – April 16, 2019[51]
  • 12.1 - March 18, 2020[52]

This system is made wi the Wolfram language (programmin leid namit after Stephen Wolfram).

References[eedit | eedit soorce]

Wolfram Mathematica Online

  1. Wolfram, Stephen (23 Juin 2008), Mathematica Turns 20 Today, Wolfram, retrieved 16 Mey 2012
  2. 'Celebrating Mathematica's First Quarter Century'. Retrieved 11 August 2015.
  3. The Software Engineering of Mathematica—Wolfram Mathematica 9 Documentation. Reference.wolfram.com. Retrieved on 2015-03-23.
  4. Raspberry Pi Includes Mathematica for Free The Verge
  5. 'Wolfram Mathematica'. Retrieved 11 August 2015.
  6. Cotta, R. M., Leonardo, S. D. B., & Mikhailov, M. D. (2001). Applied Numerical Analysis with Mathematica. Editora E-papers.
  7. 'In Less Than a Year, So Much New: Launching Version 12.1 of Wolfram Language & Mathematica'.
  8. Maeder, Roman E. (1994). The Mathematica® Programmer. Academic Press, Inc. p. 6. ISBN978-1-48321-415-3.
  9. 'Wolfram Language Q&A'. Wolfram Research. Retrieved 5 December 2016.
  10. Bezanson, Jeff; Karpinski, Stefan; Shah, Viral; Edelman, Alan (14 Februar 2012). 'Why We Created Julia'. Julia Language. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
  11. Hickey, Rich. 'Clojure Bookshelf'. Amazon.com. Archived frae the original on 3 October 2017. Retrieved 6 Mey 2020.
  12. Stephen Wolfram Aims to Democratize His Software by Steve Lohr, The New York Times, December 14, 2015
  13. Cheung, C. K., Keough, G. E., Gross, R. H., & Landraitis, C. (2005). Getting started with Mathematica. Wiley.
  14. Mangano, S. (2010). Mathematica Cookbook: Building Blocks for Science, Engineering, Finance, Music, and More. ' O'Reilly Media, Inc.'.
  15. Gass, R. (1997). Mathematica for scientists and engineers: using Mathematica to do science. Prentice Hall PTR.
  16. Shaw, W. T., & Tigg, J. (1993). Applied Mathematica: getting started, getting it done. Addison-Wesley Longman Publishing Co., Inc.
  17. Maeder, R. E. (2000). Computer Science with MATHEMATICA®: Theory and Practice for Science, Mathematics, and Engineering. Cambridge University Press.
  18. Abbena, E., Salamon, S., & Gray, A. (2017). Modern differential geometry of curves and surfaces with Mathematica. CRC Press.
  19. Davis, H. T., & Thomson, K. T. (2000). Linear Algebra and Linear Operators in Engineering: With Applications in Mathematica®. Elsevier.
  20. Baumann, G. (2013). Symmetry analysis of differential equations with Mathematica®. Springer Science & Business Media.
  21. Abell, M. L., & Braselton, J. P. (2016). Differential equations with Mathematica. Academic Press.
  22. Gray, A., Mezzino, M., & Pinsky, M. A. (1997). Introduction to ordinary differential equations with Mathematica: an integrated multimedia approach. Springer.
  23. Ross, C. C. (2013). Differential equations: an introduction with Mathematica®. Springer Science & Business Media.
  24. Kythe, P. K., Schäferkotter, M. R., & Puri, P. (2018). Partial differential equations and Mathematica. CRC Press.
  25. Ganzha, V. G. E., & Vorozhtsov, E. V. (1996). Numerical solutions for partial differential equations: problem solving using Mathematica (Vol. 7). CRC Press.
  26. 'Mathematica Latest Version and Quick Revision History'. Retrieved 11 August 2015.
  27. Mathematica: The Scrapbook, Wolfram, archived frae the original on 18 Mey 2012, retrieved 16 Mey 2012'Archived copy'. Archived frae the original on 18 Mey 2012. Retrieved 25 Juin 2020.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  28. 'The Mathematica Journal: Volume 9, Issue 1: News Bulletins'. Archived frae the original on 3 Mairch 2016. Retrieved 11 August 2015.
  29. Supercomputer Pictures Solve the Once Insoluble, John Markoff, October 30, 1988.
  30. abcdefghijkNasser M. Abbasi. 'A little bit of Mathematica history'.
  31. Mathematica 1.2 adds new graphics options: upgrade also promises concurrent operations by Elinor Craig, MacWeek, July 25, 1989.
  32. Mathematica + 283 functions = Mathematica 2.0 by Raines Cohen, MacWeek, January 15, 1991.
  33. New version of Mathematica, Mechanical Engineering, June 1, 1993.
  34. 'Wolfram News Archive'. Wolfram.com. Archived frae the original on 2 Mairch 2013. Retrieved 16 August 2013.
  35. Mathematica 4.0 by Charles Seiters, Macworld, October 1, 1999.
  36. Mathematica 5.0 Adds Up: Exactly 15 years after Mathematica's initial release, Wolfram Research has released Mathematica, PC Magazine, September 3, 2003.
  37. Mathematica 5.1's Web Services Add Up; Mathematica 5.1 delivers improvements over Version 5.0 that are vastly out of proportion for a .1 upgrade. by Peter Coffee, eWeek, December 6, 2004.
  38. Mathematica hits 64-bit[deid airtin], MacWorld UK, July 13, 2005.
  39. Today, Mathematica is reinvented – Blog by Stephen Wolfram
  40. Mathematica 6: Felix Grant finds that version 6 of Wolfram Research's symbolic mathematical software really does live up to its expectations. Scientific Computing, 2007.
  41. Mathematica 7.0 Released Today! – Blog by Stephen Wolfram
  42. 'Stephen Wolfram blog: Mathematica 8!'. Retrieved 18 November 2010.
  43. 'Stephen Wolfram blog: Mathematica 9 Is Released Today!'. Retrieved 28 November 2012.
  44. 'Stephen Wolfram blog: Launching Mathematica 10–with 700+ New Functions and a Crazy Amount of R&D'. Retrieved 9 Julie 2014.
  45. 'Wolfram Research News » Mathematica 10.1 is Now Available!'. Archived frae the original on 22 August 2015. Retrieved 11 August 2015.
  46. 'Mathematica Latest Version and Quick Revision History'. Retrieved 11 August 2015.
  47. 'Stephen Wolfram blog: Today We Launch Version 11!'. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
  48. 'Stephen Wolfram blog: The R&D Pipeline Continues: Launching Version 11.1'. Retrieved 16 Mairch 2017.
  49. 'Stephen Wolfram blog: It's Another Impressive Release! Launching Version 11.2 Today'. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  50. 'Stephen Wolfram blog: Roaring into 2018 with Another Big Release: Launching Version 11.3 of the Wolfram Language & Mathematica'. Retrieved 8 Mairch 2018.
  51. 'Stephen Wolfram blog: Version 12 Launches Today! (And It's a Big Jump for Wolfram Language and Mathematica)'. Retrieved 16 Apryle 2019.
  52. 'Stephen Wolfram In Less Than a Year, So Much New: Launching Version 12.1 of Wolfram Language & Mathematica'. Retrieved 18 Mairch 2020.
Wolfram alpha

Wolfram Mathematica

External links[eedit | eedit soorce]

  • Image identificationArchived 2020-07-22 at the Wayback Machine website powerit bi Mathematica
  • Wolfram Demonstrations Project Mathematica basit demonstrations
  • A little bit of Mathematica history documenting the growth of code base and number of functions over time
Taen frae 'https://sco.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wolfram_Mathematica&oldid=844200'




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