For any mathematics undergraduate navigating the rigorous waters of a differential equations course, the name commands a certain respect. His textbook, Linear Partial Differential Equations —now in its 4th edition via Dover Publications—remains a staple for its clarity, historical context, and unyielding focus on analytical methods.
Answers and hints for selected exercises are included at the back of the textbook.
This is where the solution manual enters the picture. In the context of Myint-U’s book, which leans heavily on the and the derivation of Fourier series , a simple answer key is useless. A numerical answer like "$u(x,t) = \sin(x)e^-t$" is often the least important part of the problem.