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2 answers

try http://mathworld.wolfram.com/, they have a section on both topics

2007-02-25 00:16:54 · answer #1 · answered by betaorix 2 · 0 0

The best places to go are probably those that have notes, problems and examples, as opposed to web sites that just explain a few topics. Notes tend to be more concise than full books, so getting through them goes faster.

There are lots of notes out there on these subjects. These look good from an introductory standpoint.

For topology, try:
http://neil-strickland.staff.shef.ac.uk/courses/topology/

Althernatively, this set of topology notes starts from the very foundations. It may not end up getting as far as other notes, but if you need to start from the ground up, this is good:
http://www.math.uab.edu/mayer/TopNotes.pdf



For complex analysis, try:
http://math.sfsu.edu/beck/papers/complex.pdf

These notes treat some of the applications of complex analysis:
http://delta.cs.cinvestav.mx/~mcintosh/comun/complex/complex.html

But if you need something closer to a textbook on complex analysis, try this:
http://www.math.gatech.edu/~cain/winter99/complex.html

2007-02-25 14:04:57 · answer #2 · answered by Edward W 4 · 0 0

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