I bought the book "Introduction to Time Series and Forecasting" by Brockwell and Davis. The first chapter was ok, but in chapter 2 I am totally lost. I cannot figure out the main idea of the explanation, and I cannot figure out the intermediate steps in the author's results; so the math becomes useless. I have no background in stochastic processes.
Can someone recommend a book similar to Brockwell & Davis in contents, but where proofs are given without "It can be shown that..." (with intermediate steps), and which has more coherent explanations? I do not understand why the authors (Brockwell and Davis) are giving the details of all these propositions. I need the book for self-study.
printf
function and ask you toimport stdio
, then somehow 'Hello World' shows up on screen. You wouldn't ask a professor to show you what's exactly in stdio and how exactly printf is implemented to see that it's doing it right. At some point later in OS class, they may show you bits and pieces of how device drivers work and how kernel interacts with them etc. When the right time comes :P $\endgroup$