Timeline for Reference book for commutative algebra
Current License: CC BY-SA 2.5
4 events
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Feb 25, 2010 at 21:42 | comment | added | Andrea Ferretti | Hochster lectures seem nice, but a bit too elementary. I had a brief glance, and it doesn't seem that they cover much more ground than Atiyah-MacDonald. | |
Feb 25, 2010 at 18:49 | comment | added | Charles Siegel | That's how I learned. A-M, first, and then, though not Hochster, I moved on to Eisenbud in a course, and also Cox-Little-O'Shea taught me Groebner everything. | |
Feb 25, 2010 at 18:15 | comment | added | Harry Gindi | Yes, I would suggest reading Hochster's notes for 614 along with Bourbaki's commutative algebra. The notes for 615 this semester are on Zariski's main theorem, the structure theory of smooth étale and unramified morphisms of rings, Artin approximation, Henselian rings, and a bunch of other stuff we haven't gotten to in class. 615 is a topics course, so the notes from different semester will yield different things. | |
Feb 25, 2010 at 18:01 | history | answered | Alicia Garcia-Raboso | CC BY-SA 2.5 |