> Furthermore the math presented in this book are all taught in 1st year courses for most CS programs I’ve encountered.
From what I see this book is much more complete than a first year course, or even the whole curriculum of a classical CS education.
I'm quite familiar with math, but I never encountered wavelet theory, Gauss-Seidel method, Rayleigh-Ritz theorem, and many more. My knowledge about other subjects such as Hermitian spaces, quaternions, finite elements is quite superficial.
From what I see this book is much more complete than a first year course, or even the whole curriculum of a classical CS education.
I'm quite familiar with math, but I never encountered wavelet theory, Gauss-Seidel method, Rayleigh-Ritz theorem, and many more. My knowledge about other subjects such as Hermitian spaces, quaternions, finite elements is quite superficial.
And I've only listed elements of Part I.