Reference request: Oldest calculus, real analysis books with exercises?

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Per the title, what are some of the oldest calculus, real analysis books out there with exercises? Maybe there are some hidden gems from before the 20th century out there.



Edit. Unsolved exercises are fine.










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  • I and one of my colleagues suspect that there are examples in textbooks and lectures today that date back to Cauchy en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cours_d%27Analyse
    – David Roberts
    6 hours ago










  • Interesting question although I’m not sure it fits this site. Maybe math.stackexchange.com would be more appropriate?
    – Anthony Quas
    5 hours ago










  • @AnthonyQuas If there is a discussion whether some other site would be more suitable, isn't History of Science and Mathematics a more natural target site than Mathematics? BTW MathOverflow had some questions about lists on old books based on some criteria - by a quick search I found Old books still used and Great mathematics books by pre-modern authors.
    – Martin Sleziak
    1 hour ago










  • I think this is a great question for this site.
    – arsmath
    1 hour ago














up vote
2
down vote

favorite












Per the title, what are some of the oldest calculus, real analysis books out there with exercises? Maybe there are some hidden gems from before the 20th century out there.



Edit. Unsolved exercises are fine.










share|cite|improve this question























  • I and one of my colleagues suspect that there are examples in textbooks and lectures today that date back to Cauchy en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cours_d%27Analyse
    – David Roberts
    6 hours ago










  • Interesting question although I’m not sure it fits this site. Maybe math.stackexchange.com would be more appropriate?
    – Anthony Quas
    5 hours ago










  • @AnthonyQuas If there is a discussion whether some other site would be more suitable, isn't History of Science and Mathematics a more natural target site than Mathematics? BTW MathOverflow had some questions about lists on old books based on some criteria - by a quick search I found Old books still used and Great mathematics books by pre-modern authors.
    – Martin Sleziak
    1 hour ago










  • I think this is a great question for this site.
    – arsmath
    1 hour ago












up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











Per the title, what are some of the oldest calculus, real analysis books out there with exercises? Maybe there are some hidden gems from before the 20th century out there.



Edit. Unsolved exercises are fine.










share|cite|improve this question















Per the title, what are some of the oldest calculus, real analysis books out there with exercises? Maybe there are some hidden gems from before the 20th century out there.



Edit. Unsolved exercises are fine.







reference-request real-analysis ca.classical-analysis-and-odes ho.history-overview






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edited 4 hours ago

























asked 6 hours ago









Get Off The Internet

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311112











  • I and one of my colleagues suspect that there are examples in textbooks and lectures today that date back to Cauchy en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cours_d%27Analyse
    – David Roberts
    6 hours ago










  • Interesting question although I’m not sure it fits this site. Maybe math.stackexchange.com would be more appropriate?
    – Anthony Quas
    5 hours ago










  • @AnthonyQuas If there is a discussion whether some other site would be more suitable, isn't History of Science and Mathematics a more natural target site than Mathematics? BTW MathOverflow had some questions about lists on old books based on some criteria - by a quick search I found Old books still used and Great mathematics books by pre-modern authors.
    – Martin Sleziak
    1 hour ago










  • I think this is a great question for this site.
    – arsmath
    1 hour ago
















  • I and one of my colleagues suspect that there are examples in textbooks and lectures today that date back to Cauchy en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cours_d%27Analyse
    – David Roberts
    6 hours ago










  • Interesting question although I’m not sure it fits this site. Maybe math.stackexchange.com would be more appropriate?
    – Anthony Quas
    5 hours ago










  • @AnthonyQuas If there is a discussion whether some other site would be more suitable, isn't History of Science and Mathematics a more natural target site than Mathematics? BTW MathOverflow had some questions about lists on old books based on some criteria - by a quick search I found Old books still used and Great mathematics books by pre-modern authors.
    – Martin Sleziak
    1 hour ago










  • I think this is a great question for this site.
    – arsmath
    1 hour ago















I and one of my colleagues suspect that there are examples in textbooks and lectures today that date back to Cauchy en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cours_d%27Analyse
– David Roberts
6 hours ago




I and one of my colleagues suspect that there are examples in textbooks and lectures today that date back to Cauchy en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cours_d%27Analyse
– David Roberts
6 hours ago












Interesting question although I’m not sure it fits this site. Maybe math.stackexchange.com would be more appropriate?
– Anthony Quas
5 hours ago




Interesting question although I’m not sure it fits this site. Maybe math.stackexchange.com would be more appropriate?
– Anthony Quas
5 hours ago












@AnthonyQuas If there is a discussion whether some other site would be more suitable, isn't History of Science and Mathematics a more natural target site than Mathematics? BTW MathOverflow had some questions about lists on old books based on some criteria - by a quick search I found Old books still used and Great mathematics books by pre-modern authors.
– Martin Sleziak
1 hour ago




@AnthonyQuas If there is a discussion whether some other site would be more suitable, isn't History of Science and Mathematics a more natural target site than Mathematics? BTW MathOverflow had some questions about lists on old books based on some criteria - by a quick search I found Old books still used and Great mathematics books by pre-modern authors.
– Martin Sleziak
1 hour ago












I think this is a great question for this site.
– arsmath
1 hour ago




I think this is a great question for this site.
– arsmath
1 hour ago










2 Answers
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It depends if you mean exercises with or without solutions. The former don’t differ much from papers (e.g. Cauchy’s “Exercise” books (1826-) are really reprints of his papers), textbooks (e.g. Lehmus’ Uebungs-Aufgaben (1823), Gregory’s Examples (1841), Sohncke’s Aufgaben (1850), Todhunter (1852, 1857), Lübsen (1855a, 1855b)) or tables (e.g. Bierens de Haan (1858)).



Boole’s book (1859) seems to be an early one with mostly unsolved exercises at chapters’ ends.






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    1
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    I heard that one popular real analysis textbook during beginning of 20th century is the Goursat. You can read an English translation at here:



    https://archive.org/details/coursemathanalys01gourrich/page/n99






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      2 Answers
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      2 Answers
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      up vote
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      down vote













      It depends if you mean exercises with or without solutions. The former don’t differ much from papers (e.g. Cauchy’s “Exercise” books (1826-) are really reprints of his papers), textbooks (e.g. Lehmus’ Uebungs-Aufgaben (1823), Gregory’s Examples (1841), Sohncke’s Aufgaben (1850), Todhunter (1852, 1857), Lübsen (1855a, 1855b)) or tables (e.g. Bierens de Haan (1858)).



      Boole’s book (1859) seems to be an early one with mostly unsolved exercises at chapters’ ends.






      share|cite|improve this answer


























        up vote
        4
        down vote













        It depends if you mean exercises with or without solutions. The former don’t differ much from papers (e.g. Cauchy’s “Exercise” books (1826-) are really reprints of his papers), textbooks (e.g. Lehmus’ Uebungs-Aufgaben (1823), Gregory’s Examples (1841), Sohncke’s Aufgaben (1850), Todhunter (1852, 1857), Lübsen (1855a, 1855b)) or tables (e.g. Bierens de Haan (1858)).



        Boole’s book (1859) seems to be an early one with mostly unsolved exercises at chapters’ ends.






        share|cite|improve this answer
























          up vote
          4
          down vote










          up vote
          4
          down vote









          It depends if you mean exercises with or without solutions. The former don’t differ much from papers (e.g. Cauchy’s “Exercise” books (1826-) are really reprints of his papers), textbooks (e.g. Lehmus’ Uebungs-Aufgaben (1823), Gregory’s Examples (1841), Sohncke’s Aufgaben (1850), Todhunter (1852, 1857), Lübsen (1855a, 1855b)) or tables (e.g. Bierens de Haan (1858)).



          Boole’s book (1859) seems to be an early one with mostly unsolved exercises at chapters’ ends.






          share|cite|improve this answer














          It depends if you mean exercises with or without solutions. The former don’t differ much from papers (e.g. Cauchy’s “Exercise” books (1826-) are really reprints of his papers), textbooks (e.g. Lehmus’ Uebungs-Aufgaben (1823), Gregory’s Examples (1841), Sohncke’s Aufgaben (1850), Todhunter (1852, 1857), Lübsen (1855a, 1855b)) or tables (e.g. Bierens de Haan (1858)).



          Boole’s book (1859) seems to be an early one with mostly unsolved exercises at chapters’ ends.







          share|cite|improve this answer














          share|cite|improve this answer



          share|cite|improve this answer








          edited 4 hours ago

























          answered 4 hours ago









          Francois Ziegler

          19.1k369113




          19.1k369113




















              up vote
              1
              down vote













              I heard that one popular real analysis textbook during beginning of 20th century is the Goursat. You can read an English translation at here:



              https://archive.org/details/coursemathanalys01gourrich/page/n99






              share|cite|improve this answer


























                up vote
                1
                down vote













                I heard that one popular real analysis textbook during beginning of 20th century is the Goursat. You can read an English translation at here:



                https://archive.org/details/coursemathanalys01gourrich/page/n99






                share|cite|improve this answer
























                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote









                  I heard that one popular real analysis textbook during beginning of 20th century is the Goursat. You can read an English translation at here:



                  https://archive.org/details/coursemathanalys01gourrich/page/n99






                  share|cite|improve this answer














                  I heard that one popular real analysis textbook during beginning of 20th century is the Goursat. You can read an English translation at here:



                  https://archive.org/details/coursemathanalys01gourrich/page/n99







                  share|cite|improve this answer














                  share|cite|improve this answer



                  share|cite|improve this answer








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