t> Welcome to Maple's on-line tutorial!
b>
t> This tutorial gives you a quick glimpse into the workings of the 
t> Maple system. It touches upon many of the basic areas and concepts
t> that you need to understand in order to make best use of the product. 
t> While we have tried to cover as many areas as possible, this on-line
t> tutorial is *not* meant to be a replacement for the existing Maple
t> Manuals (i.e., First Leaves, Language Reference Manual, etc.). For more
t> information, please consult these manuals or other Maple books
t> available to you.
b>
t> After this section, a menu appears providing you with a choice
t> of Maple topics. Each topic contains text and example sections, and most 
t> also contain "question and answer" sections. Try as many of the questions
t> as you can - the best way to learn Maple is through active participation!
t> There are several short quizzes at various spots in the tutorial to help
t> you recap what you have learned.
b>
c1> 
t> The programming of this tutorial was done entirely within Maple V
t> Release 3, taking advantage of the I/O capabilities introduced in 
t> Maple V Release 2. The Maple source files that created this program 
t> are available to you, with the intention that you can thereby customize
t> the tutorial to suit your specific needs. For more information, read the
t> comments that appear at the beginning of the file "tutorial.src", which
t> resides in your Maple tutorial directory/folder.
b>
t> This tutorial was written specifically to run on *all* Maple V Release
t> 3 platforms. While it may not take full advantage of many of the
t> interface capabilities of some platforms, it is intended that future
t> releases of Maple will contain improved versions of this program. If
t> you have any questions or suggestions, please contact a Maple Support
t> Representative near you.
b>
t> Now we begin!
b> 
c1>
eof> 
