If you are looking for solutions to " A Book of Abstract Algebra
1. The "Gold Standard" Resource: Robert Campbell’s Page
Why Pinter matters
- Sets A & B: These are usually "Compute" or "Check." They are easy. Do not look up solutions for these. They build the muscle memory you need for later.
- Set C: Usually asks you to prove something specific or find a counterexample. If you are stuck here, you may have missed a definition.
- Sets D, E, F (The "Theory"): This is where the real learning happens. If you are stuck on these for 30+ minutes, write down exactly where you are stuck (e.g., "I don't know how to show that $x \cdot y$ is in the set") and then check the solution.