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Which is by far the best book in DSP?

Started by bharat pathak February 8, 2008
Hello All,

      Which is by far the best book in DSP?

Regards
Bharat
bharat pathak wrote:
> Hello All, > > Which is by far the best book in DSP? > > Regards > Bharat
The one I have in mind is only a smidgen better that the runner up, so you don't want to know. Jerry -- Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get. �����������������������������������������������������������������������
>bharat pathak wrote: >> Hello All, >> >> Which is by far the best book in DSP? >> >> Regards >> Bharat > >The one I have in mind is only a smidgen better that the runner up, so >you don't want to know. > >Jerry >-- >Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get. >�����������������������������������������������������������������������
Hi Jerry, In that case let us make it top 5. Regards Bharat
>bharat pathak wrote: >> Hello All, >> >> Which is by far the best book in DSP? >> >> Regards >> Bharat > >The one I have in mind is only a smidgen better that the runner up, so >you don't want to know. > >Jerry >-- >Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get. >�����������������������������������������������������������������������
Hi Jerry, In that case let us make it top 5. Regards Bharat
Let me begin with, mylist of top 5 books: Others are welcome to
agree/disagree add/delete to the list.

1. Digital signal processing : principles algorithms and applications
   proakis and manolakis

2. DSP a practical approach : Ifeachor Jervis

3. DSP using matlab : Ingle and Proakis

4. Discrete time signal processing : oppenheim, schafer and buck.

5. Understanding DSP : Richard Lyons.

   The above sequence is not in any preferrential order.

Bharat Pathak
"bharat pathak" <bharat@arithos.com> wrote in message 
news:55OdnejCTL3kezbanZ2dnUVZ_gCdnZ2d@giganews.com...
> >bharat pathak wrote: >>> Hello All, >>> >>> Which is by far the best book in DSP? >>>
It depends on what you're interested in. Some are better for basics. Others for filter design. Others for communication system blocks. etc. Fred
Let us concetrate only on DSP in general.

We will come to specialised topics later like
a. adaptive filter theory
b. filter design.
c. audio proc
d. comm theory
e. wavelet
f. image processing
g. etc.



>It depends on what you're interested in. Some are better for basics. >Others for filter design. Others for communication system blocks. etc. > >Fred > > >
bharat pathak wrote:

> Let me begin with, mylist of top 5 books: Others are welcome to > agree/disagree add/delete to the list. > > 1. Digital signal processing : principles algorithms and applications > &#4294967295; &#4294967295;proakis and manolakis > > 2. DSP a practical approach : Ifeachor Jervis > > 3. DSP using matlab : Ingle and Proakis > > 4. Discrete time signal processing : oppenheim, schafer and buck.
Who the heck is Buck? I like my O&S, 1975 edition. I also bought DSP by P&M, which many people around here like. It's a bit more modern than the O&S, and contains some additional stuff on statistics, optimal filters (mainly predictors) and least-squares techniques which should belong to the basics in DSP education (after all, DSP is about data processing). I don't know 2. and 3. from your list. For more advanced techniques, I like Statistical DSP and Modeling by Hayes.
> > 5. Understanding DSP : Richard Lyons.
Amen.
> > &#4294967295; &#4294967295;The above sequence is not in any preferrential order. > > Bharat Pathak
Regards, Andor
"Andor" <andor.bariska@gmail.com> wrote in message 
news:687d4e9e-e24a-4d8f-8bd9-2d86446ad04b@s37g2000prg.googlegroups.com...

> For more advanced techniques, I > like Statistical DSP and Modeling by Hayes. > 5. Understanding DSP : Richard Lyons.
Rick's book is good. For more thorough explanations that don't get too far over my head, I like Stephen W. Smith's "Digital Signal Processing" a lot.
On 8 Feb, 10:50, Andor <andor.bari...@gmail.com> wrote:
> (after all, DSP is about > data processing).
No such list without Bendat & Piersol's "Random Data"! That's the only book I know of which actually addresses how to *use* general[*] DSP techniques... Rune [*] There is at least one on seismics (Yilmaz' "Seismic Data Processing") and probably a few on speech processing, but those would be specialist literature for particular applications.