

Chapter 14: Creating Figures and Diagrams with Graphics Primitives.Chapter 13: Styling and Customizing Graphics.Chapter 9: Sharing Mathematica Documents.Chapter 8: Wolfram|Alpha-Mode Notebooks New Chapter!.Chapter 7: Creating Interactive Models with a Single Command.Chapter 6: Fundamentals of the Wolfram Language.Chapter 4: Word Processing and Typesetting.Chapter 2: A Sample Project in Mathematica.Non-Fiction: Computer Programming/Mathematical and Statistical Softwareĭistributed by Ingram, Amazon and Baker & Taylor Contents Read a Sample Chapter Go to Information and Media Inquiries You can access companion material to this book, including video classes and live training tutorials online.īuy from Amazon Buy from Barnes & Noble Buy from Wolfram The book and its video series are the cornerstone of learning for individuals, courses and organizations' first use of Mathematica. In the years since its original publication in 2015, Hands-on Start to Wolfram Mathematica has been translated into Chinese, Japanese and Korean to reach a wider audience. This book is an introduction and provides a hands-on experience introducing the breadth of Mathematica and the Wolfram Language, with a focus on ease of use. Please feel free to report any to me on the tutorial GitHub repository and I'll try to correct them at my soonest convenience.Hands-on Start to Wolfram Mathematica and Programming with the Wolfram Languageįor more than 30 years, Mathematica has been the principal computation environment for millions of innovators, educators, students and others around the world. The website is built from a collection of Mathematica notebooks using the SiteBuilder package in BTools and so any contributions will have to be in the form of either Markdown or Markdown notebooks. If you'd like to contribute, a copy of this lives at /mresources/tutorial and any changes you make can be merged in. To facilitate the ease of use, this tutorial provides a sandbox Wolfram Cloud notebook accessible via the thumb at the bottom of each tutorial page. There is also navigation bar to take one between sections. The tutorial is broken into sections which may be browsed in the Table of Contents.

Its purpose is to quickly get one used to programming in Mathematica with an eye for its various strengths, weakness, pitfalls, and idiosyncrasies. This is a little Mathematica tutorial written for a group of chemists I knew. A (Somewhat) Quick Intro to Mathematica
