[Equations in this post may not look right (or appear at all) in your RSS reader. Go to the original article to see them rendered properly.] This would have been the last post in the series if I hadn’t realized recently that another method deserved a post. So this is the penultimate. It was described in this 1943 paper by Nathan Newmark and is known—or was known—as Newmark’s method. I say was because this method is dead. How dead? Forty-five years ago, when I was an undergraduate taking structural analysis courses, Newmark’s method wasn’t being taught in the department that he had been the head of for decades and whose main building is named after him. That’s dead. Which isn’t to say it wasn’t a good method. Some of my professors talked about using it when they were young, and it was a practical technique when engineers used slide rules and desk calculators, but it was clear by the 80s that its time had passed. Still, it’s desncribed in the textbook I used as an undergrad, and I did…
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