References

  1. Fernando Alegre & Juana Moreno: Haskell in Middle and High School Mathematics. Submission to TFPIE 2015.
  2. Richard P. Feynman, Robert B. Leighton & Matthew Sands (1965): The Feynman Lectures on Physics, Quantum Mechanics. Addison-Wesley.
  3. Jerzy Karczmarczuk (2003): Structure and Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics: A Functional Framework. In: Proceedings of the 2003 ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on Haskell, Haskell '03. ACM, New York, NY, USA, pp. 50–61, doi:10.1145/871895.871901.
  4. Seymour A. Papert (1993): Mindstorms: Children, Computers, And Powerful Ideas, 2 edition. Basic Books.
  5. William H. Press, Brian P. Flannery, Saul A. Teukolsky & William T. Vetterling (1989): Numerical Recipes: The Art of Scientific Computing. Cambridge University Press.
  6. J. J. Sakurai & Jim Napolitano (2011): Modern Quantum Mechanics, 2nd edition. Addison-Wesley.
  7. Benjamin Schumacher & Michael Westmoreland (2010): Quantum Processes, Systems, and Information. Cambridge University Press, doi:10.1017/CBO9780511814006.
  8. Gerald Jay Sussman & Jack Wisdom (2001): Structure and Interpretation of Classical Mechanics. The MIT Press.
  9. Gerald Jay Sussman & Jack Wisdom (2013): Functional Differential Geometry. The MIT Press.
  10. John S. Townsend (2012): A Modern Approach to Quantum Mechanics, 2nd edition. University Science Books.
  11. Scott N. Walck (2012–2016): The learn-physics package. http://hackage.haskell.org/package/learn-physics.
  12. Scott N. Walck (2014): Learn Physics by Programming in Haskell. In: James Caldwell, Philip Hölzenspies & Peter Achten: Proceedings 3rd International Workshop on Trends in Functional Programming in Education, Soesterberg, The Netherlands, 25th May 2014, Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 170. Open Publishing Association, pp. 67–77, doi:10.4204/EPTCS.170.5.

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