G'Day Everyone,
I'm in the final stages of writing a chapter for the upcoming CRC Press title "The Engineering Handbook - 2nd Ed" (Richard Dorf) to be released later this year. What I have attempted to do is put as many of the "essential" LabVIEW philosophy and coding reference information in about 20 pages (not an easy task, I can tell you!) I'm almost up to the publisher's sub deadline, and I was wondering if there was anyone out there that would like to have a look over my manuscript as a proof reader, to ensure that I haven't left anything out? I intended to have the manuscript finished and sent out to proof readers sometime around Monday 28th of April, and would need you to have a quick look over it, and have comments/corrections back to me by Thursday the 1st of May, so I can get it all together and in the mail as soon as possible. I'd really appreciate any help that you can give me!
For those interested, this is the publisher brief regarding the Engineering Handbook, 2nd Ed:
"The purpose of The Engineering Handbook is to provide in a single volume a ready reference for the practicing engineer in industry, government, and academia. The book in its comprehensive format is divided into 30 sections, which encompass the field of engineering. The goal is to provide the most up-to-date information on the classical fields that comprise mechanical, electrical, civil, chemical, industrial, and aerospace engineering as well as the underlying fields of mathematics and materials. The book should serve the information needs of all professional engineers engaged in the practice of the profession whether in industry, education, or government. The focus of the handbook is on the key concepts, models, and equations that enable the engineer to analyze, design, and predict the behavior of complex devices, circuits, instruments, systems, structures, plants, computers, fuels, and the environment. While data and formulae are summarized, the main focus is the provision of the underlying theories and concepts and the appropriate application of these theories to the field of engineering. With equal emphasis placed on materials, structures, mechanics, dynamics, fluids, thermodynamics, fuels and energy, transportation, environmental systems, circuits and systems, computers and instruments, manufacturing, aeronautical and aerospace, and economics and management as well as mathematics, the engineer should encounter a wide range of concepts and considerable depth of exploration of these concepts as they lead to application and design."
ta,
Chris
Christopher G. Relf
Certified LabVIEW Developer
Christopher.Relf@mBox.com.au
International Voicemail & Fax: +61 2 8080 8132
Australian Voicemail & Fax: (02) 8080 8132
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