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I learnt about Sylow group in a book that use a "Method from England" which is consist of to make a courses with exercices instead of exemples or proofs. (And of course the solution are in the end of the book !).

I understood the theory so easily with this book !

So I would like to do it again but I don't know any other books like this.

Can you help me to find some please ?

I study maths at the university since 4 years now. So the subjetct should be not too basic.

Thank you for your help !

  • If you are so much interested in Algebra, why not try books on Algebra by Herstein or Artin? – Aniruddha Deshmukh Nov 25 '18 at 11:06
  • The whole of the Schaum's Outline series is somewhat like this. – Gerry Myerson Nov 25 '18 at 11:18
  • Hi ! I like algebra, probability (I started stochastic process this years), analysis, measure theory (I really love it), ... –  Nov 25 '18 at 11:40
  • @ Aniruddha Deshmukh : Your book are very good thank you, but it is not the aim of the topic. –  Nov 25 '18 at 11:41
  • @ Gerry Myerson : Thank you ! This collection is huge, can you be more specific please. –  Nov 25 '18 at 11:43
  • You can probably tell from the title of each book, what the topic is, and whether it interests you. E.g., for probability, there's a Schaum's Outline of Probability and Statistics, a Schaum's Outline of Probability, Random Variables, and Random Processes, a Schaum's Outline of Probability – I have no way to know which one(s) will meet your needs. If the branch of math you're interested in is xxxx, just type Schaum's Outline xxxx into Google, and see what comes back. – Gerry Myerson Nov 27 '18 at 02:42
  • Yeah I did that, thank you again. –  Nov 27 '18 at 07:33

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Elementary Number Theory by Joe Roberts is written entirely as a set of exercises with solutions. It also has the distinction of being done in calligraphy.

Gerry Myerson
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