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The Statistics and Calculus with Python Workshop

You're reading from  The Statistics and Calculus with Python Workshop

Product type Book
Published in Aug 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800209763
Pages 740 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Authors (6):
Peter Farrell Peter Farrell
Profile icon Peter Farrell
Alvaro Fuentes Alvaro Fuentes
Profile icon Alvaro Fuentes
Ajinkya Sudhir Kolhe Ajinkya Sudhir Kolhe
Profile icon Ajinkya Sudhir Kolhe
Quan Nguyen Quan Nguyen
Profile icon Quan Nguyen
Alexander Joseph Sarver Alexander Joseph Sarver
Profile icon Alexander Joseph Sarver
Marios Tsatsos Marios Tsatsos
Profile icon Marios Tsatsos
View More author details

Table of Contents (14) Chapters

Preface
1. Fundamentals of Python 2. Python's Main Tools for Statistics 3. Python's Statistical Toolbox 4. Functions and Algebra with Python 5. More Mathematics with Python 6. Matrices and Markov Chains with Python 7. Doing Basic Statistics with Python 8. Foundational Probability Concepts and Their Applications 9. Intermediate Statistics with Python 10. Foundational Calculus with Python 11. More Calculus with Python 12. Intermediate Calculus with Python Appendix

Sequences and Series

If you were to participate in a TV show where the $10,000 question was "Given the numbers 2, 4, 8, 16, and 32, what comes next in the sequence?", what would your best guess be? If your response is 64, then congratulations—you just came closer to understanding one of the key concepts in mathematical abstraction: that of a sequence. A sequence is, pretty much like in the ordinary sense of the word, a particular order in which things follow each other. Here, things are (in most cases) integers or real numbers that are related. The order of the elements matters. The elements are also called the members or terms of the sequence.

For example, in the preceding sequence of the TV show you participated in, every term stems from the number prior being multiplied by 2; there is no end in this sequence as there is no end in the number of terms (integer numbers) you can come up with. In other instances, elements in a sequence can appear more than once. Think...

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