Subcategories 12
Related categories 5
Sites 44
In his classic A Mathematician's Apology, G. H. Hardy likened mathematics to poetry and painting. This site elaborates on Hardy's remark with quotations from Stevens, Klee, Fry, and Focillon. Links to related sites are given.
An applet for making spirograph graphs. Includes options for size, color and shape. Allows saving of completed image.
Includes description, solutions and other resources on this cube-like puzzle.
A large collection of cryptarithms and alphametics, including cryptarithms from the journal Sphinx, a Primer on Cryptarithmetic, books, and links to other collections of alphametics on the Web.
Include news, math tricks, methods, facts, trivia, mostly posted by users.
New version of the classic puzzle using row/column/quadrant permutations to display symmetries of graphic designs. Has link to a site on the underlying mathematics (Diamond Theory).
The mathematical art of Robert Bosch. Oberlin, Ohio USA.
Book list from Eric Weisstein including titles, authors, publishers, prices, page count and some have links to Amazon.com.
Includes a complete list of all possible Fair Dice, most of which are not cubes. Includes pictures.
Visual animations of famous curves.
Three categories: defensive - know to check an answer, offensive - fast mental calculations, and math magic.
Numerous facts including formulas, magic tricks, fallacies and recreations compiled by Dr. Gerard P. Michon.
Rough index to the fifteen books containing Martin Gardner's Mathematical Games articles from Scientific American.
By Joseph Malkevitch: "Given one shape X how and when can one pack identical copies of this shape into another shape Y?"
A collection of problems from MIT. Work reported herein was conducted at the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology research program.
Provides a method of finding a square root without the use of a calculator.
A page on polyiamond puzzles. Includes many pages on tessellation.
A newsletter edited by undergraduates of the Department of Mathematics at the University of Toronto. Includes some online copies.
A guide to major motion pictures with scenes of real mathematics.
Interactive java puzzles and activities in different mathematical topics.
Mathematical art and other ideas from Martin Holtham. Guildford, England.
Designed and built by Andrew Lipson. Images and LDraw files.
Mathematics Hots (Problems) by Bruno Kevius
Individual pages on different topics in Mathematics. Examples : group theory, dynamical systems theory, geometry or number theory.
Topics include Flexagon, Soma Cube, Pentominos, Cube-it, Rubik's Cube, Froebel's Star, Tangram, House of Santa Claus, Chronogram, Numeric Palindromes, Latticework of Letters. English/German.
Have fun with geometric shapes, fractals, math games, art, humor, quotes, and important constants.
Includes puzzles, jokes, quotations, poetry, and FAQs.
A short description of mazes and how to create them. Definition of different mazetypes and their algorithms.
An archive of interesting math facts for use in the classroom or just for fun. Browse by subject, difficulty, keywords, or try the "random" feature. Based at Harvey Mudd College.
View this week's problem or those of previous weeks.
Puzzles and problems connected with numbers using the digits 1-9.
Features interesting facts about different numbers. Includes favorite related links.
This is an article on a set of didactical games edited by the Portuguese Mathematical Society (SPM).
[PDF]
An extensive list of web resources for recreational math.
A forum for posting messages about math recreations. Hosted at Delphi.
The art of Robert Fathauer, inspired by mathematics, including tessellations, knots, fractals, illusion, and symmetry. Limited edition prints and ceramic sculpture.
Includes a introduction to Roman numerals including a translation of the digits used and a converter which can convert decimal to Roman numerals and vice versa.
Home of Simon Singh: author, journalist and TV producer, specialising in science and mathematics. Cryptography is one of his specialties, and his site has a lot of educational and fun content about codes and codebreaking.
A colourful world built entirely using mathematical atoms and molecules. Pictures and animations demonstrate structures colliding and interacting. Animated GIF demonstrations.
Algorithmic music determined by mathematics and by the musical preferences of a human. General MIDI files.
A collection of card tricks, number guessing games, paper and glue magic, and other math exercises.
Given a m * n rectangle, place all numbers from 1 to mn that minimizes the sum of the products of rows and columns (both in Spanish and English).
Profile and description of his mathematical games and puzzles.
An essay by Scott Aaronson on the quest for ever-bigger numbers, from exponentials to Busy Beavers.
A guide to major motion pictures with scenes of real mathematics.
Mathematical art and other ideas from Martin Holtham. Guildford, England.
View this week's problem or those of previous weeks.
The art of Robert Fathauer, inspired by mathematics, including tessellations, knots, fractals, illusion, and symmetry. Limited edition prints and ceramic sculpture.
The mathematical art of Robert Bosch. Oberlin, Ohio USA.
Provides a method of finding a square root without the use of a calculator.
Algorithmic music determined by mathematics and by the musical preferences of a human. General MIDI files.
Numerous facts including formulas, magic tricks, fallacies and recreations compiled by Dr. Gerard P. Michon.
Visual animations of famous curves.
A large collection of cryptarithms and alphametics, including cryptarithms from the journal Sphinx, a Primer on Cryptarithmetic, books, and links to other collections of alphametics on the Web.
Includes description, solutions and other resources on this cube-like puzzle.
Have fun with geometric shapes, fractals, math games, art, humor, quotes, and important constants.
A forum for posting messages about math recreations. Hosted at Delphi.
Book list from Eric Weisstein including titles, authors, publishers, prices, page count and some have links to Amazon.com.
In his classic A Mathematician's Apology, G. H. Hardy likened mathematics to poetry and painting. This site elaborates on Hardy's remark with quotations from Stevens, Klee, Fry, and Focillon. Links to related sites are given.
A collection of card tricks, number guessing games, paper and glue magic, and other math exercises.
Three categories: defensive - know to check an answer, offensive - fast mental calculations, and math magic.
New version of the classic puzzle using row/column/quadrant permutations to display symmetries of graphic designs. Has link to a site on the underlying mathematics (Diamond Theory).
An applet for making spirograph graphs. Includes options for size, color and shape. Allows saving of completed image.
This is an article on a set of didactical games edited by the Portuguese Mathematical Society (SPM).
[PDF]
Includes a complete list of all possible Fair Dice, most of which are not cubes. Includes pictures.
Includes a introduction to Roman numerals including a translation of the digits used and a converter which can convert decimal to Roman numerals and vice versa.
Topics include Flexagon, Soma Cube, Pentominos, Cube-it, Rubik's Cube, Froebel's Star, Tangram, House of Santa Claus, Chronogram, Numeric Palindromes, Latticework of Letters. English/German.
By Joseph Malkevitch: "Given one shape X how and when can one pack identical copies of this shape into another shape Y?"
Include news, math tricks, methods, facts, trivia, mostly posted by users.
Puzzles and problems connected with numbers using the digits 1-9.
An essay by Scott Aaronson on the quest for ever-bigger numbers, from exponentials to Busy Beavers.
Rough index to the fifteen books containing Martin Gardner's Mathematical Games articles from Scientific American.
An archive of interesting math facts for use in the classroom or just for fun. Browse by subject, difficulty, keywords, or try the "random" feature. Based at Harvey Mudd College.
Mathematics Hots (Problems) by Bruno Kevius
A short description of mazes and how to create them. Definition of different mazetypes and their algorithms.
Includes puzzles, jokes, quotations, poetry, and FAQs.
A newsletter edited by undergraduates of the Department of Mathematics at the University of Toronto. Includes some online copies.
Interactive java puzzles and activities in different mathematical topics.
An extensive list of web resources for recreational math.
A page on polyiamond puzzles. Includes many pages on tessellation.
A colourful world built entirely using mathematical atoms and molecules. Pictures and animations demonstrate structures colliding and interacting. Animated GIF demonstrations.
Individual pages on different topics in Mathematics. Examples : group theory, dynamical systems theory, geometry or number theory.
Profile and description of his mathematical games and puzzles.
Given a m * n rectangle, place all numbers from 1 to mn that minimizes the sum of the products of rows and columns (both in Spanish and English).
A collection of problems from MIT. Work reported herein was conducted at the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology research program.
Home of Simon Singh: author, journalist and TV producer, specialising in science and mathematics. Cryptography is one of his specialties, and his site has a lot of educational and fun content about codes and codebreaking.
Features interesting facts about different numbers. Includes favorite related links.
Designed and built by Andrew Lipson. Images and LDraw files.
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October 18, 2023 at 6:35:15 UTC

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