Designed both for those who seek an acquaintance with dynamic programming and for those wishing to become experts,
this text is accessible to anyone who's taken a course in operations research. It starts with a basic introduction
to sequential decision processes and proceeds to the use of dynamic programming in studying models of resource
allocation. Subsequent topics include methods for approximating solutions of control problems in continuous time,
production control, decision-making in the face of an uncertain future, and inventory control models. The final
chapter introduces sequential decision processes that lack fixed planning horizons, and the supplementary chapters
treat data structures and the basic properties of convex functions. 1982 ed. Preface to the Dover Edition. Bibliography.
Index.