A standard source of information of functions of one complex variable, this text has retained its wide popularity in this field by being consistently rigorous without becoming needlessly concerned with advanced or overspecialized material. Difficult points have been clarified, the book has been reviewed for accuracy, and notations and terminology have been modernized. Chapter 2, Complex Functions, features a brief section on the change of length and area under conformal mapping, and much of Chapter 8, Global-Analytic Functions, has been rewritten in order to introduce readers to the terminology of germs and sheaves while still emphasizing that classical concepts are the backbone of the theory. Chapter 4, Complex Integration, now includes a new and simpler proof of the general form of Cauchy's theorem. There is a short section on the Riemann zeta function, showing the use of residues in a more exciting situation than in the computation of definite integrals.
Lars Valerian Ahlfors, William Caspar Graustein Professor of Mathematics, died of pneumonia on Oct. 11 in Pittsfield, Mass., at the age of 89. Ahlfors won the first Fields Medal awarded by the International Mathematics Society in 1936, a quadrennial award considered equivalent, in mathematics, to the Nobel Prize. In 1979, he was awarded the prestigious Wolf Prize in Jerusalem. Ahlfors was best known for his work in complex analysis, a fundamental subject with many applications from number theory to modern physics. His textbook, Complex Analysis, first published in 1953, with new editions in 1966 and 1979, is still considered the leading text in the field. He wrote three other mathematical books and published almost 100 papers. Colleagues and students have described his work as extraordinarily elegant, and his lectures, delivered in thundering basso, as stunningly beautiful. Ahlfors was born in Helsinki, Finland, in 1907. As he often observed, his mother's death during his birth critically influenced his life. His father, a professor of mechanical engineering at the Polytechnic Institute, was attentive but stern. In the brief autobiographical note that introduced his collected papers, published in 1982, he wrote that, "As a child, I was fascinated by mathematics without understanding what it was about, but I was by no means a child prodigy. As a matter of fact, I had no access to any mathematical literature except in the highest grades. . . . The high school curriculum did not include any calculus but I finally managed to learn some on my own, thanks to clandestine visits to my father's engineering library." Ahlfors' introduction to higher mathematics, including complex analysis, came from his mentors at Helsinki University, Ernst Lindelof and Rolf Nevanlinna. At 21, Ahlfors followed Nevanlinna to the Federal Polytechnic Institute in Zurich, where he began working at a research level. There he produced his first major work, a study of asymptotic values of an entire function, based on his own new approach to conformal mapping. Self-effacingly, Ahlfors credited Nevanlinna and another teacher, George Polya, for their "considerable help." They, in turn, insisted that he publish the results solely in his own name. Thereafter, as he expressed it, "I have tried to repay my debt by never accepting to appear as coauthor with a student."
This is the standard graduate textbook in the field. Though readable, it is dense, and suffers from a lack of figures, exercises, and (above all) examples. It is very possible to read this book with pleasure from cover to cover, but end up unable to do anything.
I echo another reviewer: it is best to know calculus perfectly, and to know a fair amount of complex analysis, before using this book for self-study. An instructor selecting this textbook is obligated to supply the examples that every student will need.
extraordinary book for beginning through advanced complex analysis, with a focus on the geometric -- but by no means lax. thoughtful, well paced, precise.
This is an excellent and classic treatment of complex analysis. The treatment is comparatively modern and uses the language of point set topology throughout. However, the author takes pains to develop geometric intuition whenever feasible, without letting the intuitiveness result in a decrease in standards or rigor. This textbook will require a good deal of mathematical maturity, although somewhat more classical in presentation, the book probably requires a bit more mathematical maturity than the modern standard by Stein and Shakarchi. The exercises look challenging, but slightly more staightforward than Stein and Shakarchi. This book should be read for the way a true towering figure in the field of complex analysis thinks about it and transmits it to beginners.
A beautiful exposition of complex analysis. One warning, though: you should have a good understanding of complex algebra and calculus before reading this text, as it is dense.
Excellent for shoring up one's understanding of any theorem that might be covered in a Complex Analysis course. Well written and perfectly accessible for any undergraduate.
I'm only skimming it (too much of it is rehashing things I already know), so I don't think this is a completely fair assessment. Mostly I would like it if theorems and definitions were more clearly marked, but I think if I were reading it in detail that might not annoy me as much.
UPDATE: It's *really* lacking in exercises. It seems okay as a *guide* for self-study, but I don't see why you wouldn't just use something else.