Saturday, April 27, 2013

Radiological Imaging of the Digestive Tract in Infants and Children


Go Radiological Imaging of the Digestive Tract in Infants and Children


GO Radiological Imaging of the Digestive Tract in Infants and Children


Author: Alexander Kaul, Andreas Dalheimer, Dietrich Becker, Guenther Dietze, Gunnar Brix, H. Graffunder, H. Klewe-Nebenius, Hans-Richard Doerfel, Herwig G. Paretzke, Katsumi Hayashi, Keith Eckerman, Manfried Lasch, Nina Petoussi-Henss, Nobuhito Ishigure, Yoshiko Harima
Type: eBook
Language: English
Released: 2005
Publisher: Springer
Page Count: 258
Format: pdf
ISBN-10: 3540202072
ISBN-13: 9783540202073
Tags:Radiological Imaging of the Digestive Tract in Infants and Children, tutorials, pdf, djvu, chm, epub, ebook, book, torrent, downloads, rapidshare, filesonic, hotfile, fileserve


Description:
Mastering Perl for Bioinformatics covers the core Perl language and many of its module extensions, presenting them in the context of biological data and problems of pressing interest to the biological community. This book, along with Beginning Perl for Bioinformatics, forms a basic course in Perl programming. This second volume finishes the basic Perl tutorial material (references, complex data structures, object-oriented programming, use of modules--all presented in a biological context) and presents some advanced topics of considerable interest in bioinformatics. Biologists and computer scientists who have conquered the basics of Perl and are ready to move even further in their mastery of this versatile language will appreciate the author's well-balanced approach to applying Perl's analytical abilities to the field of bioinformatics. Full of practical examples and real-world biological problem solving, this book is a must for any reader wanting to move beyond beginner level Perl in bioinformatics. --This text refers to an alternate edition. About the Author James Tisdall has a B.A. in mathematics from the City College of New York and an M.S. in computer science from Columbia University; he is working towards a Ph.D. in computer science at the University of Pennsylvania. He worked as a bioinformaticist at Mercator Genetics in Menlo Park, California, and at Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia. In addition, he had been a musician and a programmer at Bell Labs (where he programmed for speech research and discovered a formal language for musical rhythm).


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