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Algorithms for Decision Making

183 points| mxschumacher | 3 years ago |algorithmsbook.com | reply

26 comments

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[+] Bromeo|3 years ago|reply
Previous discussions:

  Algorithms for Decision Making(http://algorithmsbook.com/)  
  693 points|Dowwie|1 year ago|85 comments
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25716581

  Algorithms for Decision Making [pdf](https://algorithmsbook.com/files/dm.pdf)  
  498 points|mindcrime|3 months ago|50 comments
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31123683
[+] dunefox|3 years ago|reply
I find Julia code quite beautiful for books in this domain. It's readable, elegant, concise, expressive, and efficient at the same time. A great language for science.
[+] layer8|3 years ago|reply
It would be nice to have a reflowable non-PDF version.
[+] solarkraft|3 years ago|reply
Please! PDFs are such an awful way of transferring information. What a joke to have to read on an LCD device or buy an enormously large and expensive E-Reader.

Makes actual printing way more attractive than it should be.

[+] iainctduncan|3 years ago|reply
This is very timely for my grad school work in computational music and algorithmic composition. Does anyone more experienced in this field know if this is an appropriate book for a newb, or if not, what a better intro would be?

thanks!

[+] derbOac|3 years ago|reply
I wish there was a colophon or something with information about everything that was used do produce the book and website from a graphics and design perspective.
[+] mirekrusin|3 years ago|reply
"We have also benefited from the various open-source packages on which this textbook depends (see appendix G). The typesetting of the code was done with the help of pythontex, which is maintained by Geoffrey Poore. The typeface used for the algorithms is JuliaMono (github.com/cormullion/juliamono). The plotting was handled by pgfplots, which is maintained by Christian Feuersänger"

?

[+] terrortrain|3 years ago|reply
I guess I'm the foolish one, but I thought the title implied that the book was about algorithms you can use to make decisions, not decision making algorithms.

If the former sounds interesting, here is a similar book I read a long time ago: https://www.amazon.com/Algorithms-Live-Computer-Science-Deci...

[+] Swizec|3 years ago|reply
Algorithms To Live By is an amazing book. My favorite chapter was the one about sorting where the author comes to the same conclusion I did many years ago – do not sort your socks. It's a waste of time. Bucket them by type instead.
[+] czbond|3 years ago|reply
Thanks for the reco - this book looks very promising. <Added via Audible>

A personal deficit I have noticed in myself is .... not being able to commit to making a decision, because I think probabilistically - that I can see the other probabilities but have been recently using some shortcuts. I need more.

[+] J_cst|3 years ago|reply
So...there are at least two foolish.
[+] visarga|3 years ago|reply
Yes, it's about reinforcement learning, same as AlphaGo.
[+] pessimizer|3 years ago|reply
You're saying that you thought it was a self-help/self-improvement book?
[+] alfiedotwtf|3 years ago|reply
Note: the underline to the links is almost invisible... I viewed source to find the hrefs