John M. Stewart was Emeritus Reader in Gravitational Physics at the University of Cambridge, and a Life Fellow at King's College, Cambridge before his death in 2016. He was the author of 'Non-equilibrium Relativistic Kinetic Theory (Springer, 1971) and 'Advanced General Relativity' (Cambridge, 1991), and he translated and edited Hans Stephani's 'General Relativity' (Cambridge, 1990). Michael Mommert is Assistant Professor for Computer Vision at the University of St. Gallen, Switzerland, where he combines computer vision and Earth observation to implement efficient learning methods for a wide range of use cases. Before, he was a Solar System Astronomer and actively wrote scientific open-source code for this community.
'This volume provides an important update to the resources available to physicists and other scientists who manipulate quantitative data for one of their most common tasks: computation ... The focus is on providing the practicing scientist a clear, concise guide to an important resource, and the author has chosen his topics appropriately. Both Python and this book deserve wide circulation.' Computing Reviews 'I highly recommend this book as a practical guide to real-life scientific programming. The book is well written, interspersed with great humor, and is presented from the viewpoint of a researcher who wants others to avoid suffering the same pitfalls and mistakes that he experienced.' The Leading Edge '... this book is still an excellent starting point to put you on the tracks to master the language and enjoy the marvels of the latest version of Python.' Adhemar Bultheel, European Mathematical Society (euro-math-soc.eu)