Logic and Language Models for Computer Science Henry Hamburger and Dana Richards George Mason University (~) 2002, Prentice Hall ISBN 0-13-065487-6 Preface (Abridged) So you are a computer science (CS) major and you are sitting down to see what this book is about. It has been assigned, the course is required, you have no choice. Still you chose your institution, your major. Maybe your instructor made a good choice. Let's hope so. Okay, you are not a computer science major, perhaps not even a student, but you have picked up this book. Maybe the title intrigued you. Will you be able to read it, to learn from it? We think so. We will try to interest you too. Or you are teaching a course that might use this book, maybe in discrete math, maybe including logics or formal language or both. If you want your CS students to see the applicability of mathematical reasoning to their own field or your math students to see the usefulness of their field outside itself, it is your students whom we have in mind. If you are a CS major, you have already noticed that this course is different from the others
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