Welcome to CE 3372 Water Systems Design¶
This is the electronic instructor’s notes for Dr. Cleveland’s section(s) of CE 3372 at Texas Tech University. These instructor’s notes are intended to parallel the regular textbook: https://www.amazon.com/Hydrology-Hydraulic-Systems-Ram-Gupta/dp/1577664558
The course content is entirely deployed on a web server hosted at Amazon Web Services at http://54.243.252.9/ce-3372-webroot/ This book is located on the same server at http://54.243.252.9/ce-3372-webroot/ce3372-jb/ce3372jb/_build/html
Suggested Citation¶
Theodore G. Cleveland (2022), Water Systems Design: Instructor’s Notes for CE 3372 at TTU. Department of Civil, Environmental, and Construction Engineering, Whitacre College of Engineering, DOI (pending).
Copyright Information¶
Copyright © 2021 Cleveland et. al., The contents of this book are licensed for free consumption under the following license: [Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
The links in the active book themselves may access other other copyrighted materials. I have taken efforts to correctly attribute such links, but have likely missed some - if you find these please let me know so we can properly attribute (or replace with a public domain equivalent)!
Note
The information below is of use to other potential institutional users of this book.
GitHub Repository This entire course (book, and exercises) is contained in a public repository on GitHub https://github.com/dustykat/ce-3372-webroot
How to Use
Clone the entire repository to /var/www/html/ce-3372-webroot. Have your main index link to this directory i.e.
http://your-fqdn-server.org/ce-3372-webroot/
You can see working example at http:/54.243.252.9/ce-3372-webroot/If you plan to modify things, many of the internal links use IP/hostname ==
54.243.252.9
, so you will have to change these addresses to your server. The string editorsed
will become your friend!
The
3-Readings
directory contains excerpts of copyrighted materials and should be exposed with care on a web server; generally because no one reads anymore, its probably safe enough to protect using an.htaccess
approach. In my courses one accesses things through the syllabus links, and the syllabus itself is best accessed through our LMS (Blackboard).