The present monograph has points in common with two branches of
analysis. One of them is the variational-difference method (the finite
element method), the other is the constructive theory of functions. The
starting point is the construction of special classes of coordinate
functions for the variational-difference method. It is based on
elementary transformations .of the independent variables of given
"primitive" functions. After the construction of the coordinate
functions, the next step is to approximate functions of a given class by
linear combinations of the coordinate functions, and to derive in some
appropriate norm an estimate of the error. Clearly, this is a problem
closely connected with the constructive theory of functions. The
monograph contains 11 chapters. Chapter I discusses Courant's basic idea
which is central to the construction of variational-difference methods.
One of Courant's examples, from which the notion of a primitive function
follows naturally, is examined in some detail. The general definition of
a primitive function and the method of construction for the
corresponding coordinate functions are given and discussed. Chapters
II-VI are more closely connected with the constructive theory of
functions. The completeness of the coordinate systems defined in Chapter
I are studied, as well as the order of approximation obtained through
the use of linear combinations of these functions. Their completeness in
Sobolev spaces are examined in Chapter II, while related orders of
approximation are derived in Chapter III.