Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Maple Based on My Research

I've learned about Maple for this semester during my first degree in IIUM Kuantan. This course was really interesting and i want to share with you some information about Maple.  
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia,Maple is a general-purpose commercial computer algebra system. It was first developed in 1980 by the Symbolic Computation Group at the University of Waterloo in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. Since 1988, it has been developed and sold commercially by Waterloo Maple Inc. (also known as Maplesoft), a Canadian company also based in Waterloo, Ontario. The current major version is version 14 which was released in April 2010.
Maple™ is the essential technical computing software for today’s engineers, mathematicians, and scientists. Whether you need to do quick calculations, develop design sheets, teach fundamental concepts, or produce sophisticated high-fidelity simulation models, Maple’s world-leading computation engine offers the breadth, depth, and performance to handle every type of mathematics.


The Maple engine is used within several other products from Maplesoft:
  • Maple T.A., Maplesoft’s online testing suite, uses Maple to algorithmically generate questions and grade student responses.
  • MapleNet allows users to create JSP pages and Java Applets. MapleNet 12 and above also allow users to upload and work with Maple worksheets containing interactive components.
  • Maple Reader, Maplesoft’s platform for DRM-controlled electronic books uses the Standard Maple interface. There are currently no available books using this product.
  • MapleSim, an engineering simulation tool.
 Everything about Maple:


Maple 13 software
Maple Interface
Maple By Example(e-book)


Listed below are third party commercial products that no longer use the Maple engine:
  • Versions of MathCad released between 1994 and 2006 included a Maple-derived algebra engine (MKM, aka Mathsoft Kernel Maple), though subsequent versions use MuPAD.
  • Symbolic Math Toolbox in MATLAB contained a portion of the Maple 10 engine but now uses MuPAD.
  • Older versions of the mathematical editor Scientific Workplace included Maple as a computational engine, though current versions include MuPAD.
Past Releases of Maple Software:
Maple Date Release
Maple 14 April 2010
Maple 13 April, 2009
Maple 12 May, 2008
Maple 11 February 21, 2007
Maple 10 May 10, 2005
Maple 9 June 30, 2003
Maple 8 April 16, 2002

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