1Func(3)               User Contributed Perl Documentation              Func(3)
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3
4

NAME

6       PDL::Func - useful functions
7

SYNOPSIS

9        use PDL::Func;
10        use PDL::Math;
11
12        # somewhat pointless way to estimate cos and sin,
13        # but is shows that you can thread if you want to
14        # (and the library lets you)
15        #
16        my $obj = PDL::Func->init( Interpolate => "Hermite" );
17        #
18        my $x = pdl( 0 .. 45 ) * 4 * 3.14159 / 180;
19        my $y = cat( sin($x), cos($x) );
20        $obj->set( x => $x, y => $y, bc => "simple" );
21        #
22        my $xi = pdl( 0.5, 1.5, 2.5 );
23        my $yi = $obj->interpolate( $xi );
24        #
25        print "sin( $xi ) equals ", $yi->slice(':,(0)'), "\n";
26        sin( [0.5 1.5 2.5] ) equals  [0.87759844 0.070737667 -0.80115622]
27        #
28        print "cos( $xi ) equals ", $yi->slice(':,(1)'), "\n";
29        cos( [0.5 1.5 2.5] ) equals  [ 0.4794191 0.99768655 0.59846449]
30        #
31        print sin($xi), "\n", cos($xi), "\n";
32        [0.47942554 0.99749499 0.59847214]
33        [0.87758256 0.070737202 -0.80114362]
34

DESCRIPTION

36       This module aims to contain useful functions. Honest.
37

INTERPOLATION AND MORE

39       This module aims to provide a relatively-uniform interface to the vari‐
40       ous interpolation methods available to PDL.  The idea is that a differ‐
41       ent interpolation scheme can be used just by changing an attribute of a
42       "PDL::Func" object.  Some interpolation schemes (as exemplified by the
43       SLATEC library) also provide additional functionality, such as integra‐
44       tion and gradient estimation.
45
46       Throughout this documentation, $x and $y refer to the function to be
47       interpolated whilst $xi and $yi are the interpolated values.
48
49       The avaliable types, or schemes, of interpolation are listed below.
50       Also given are the valid attributes for each scheme: the flag value
51       indicates whether it can be set (s), got (g), and if it is required (r)
52       for the method to work.
53
54       Interpolate => Linear
55           An extravagent way of calling the linear interpolation routine
56           PDL::Primitive::interpolate.
57
58           The valid attributes are:
59
60            Attribute    Flag  Description
61            x            sgr   x positions of data
62            y            sgr   function values at x positions
63            err          g     error flag
64
65       Interpolate => Hermite
66           Use the piecewice cubic Hermite interpolation routines from the
67           SLATEC library.  Only available if PDL::Slatec is installed.
68
69           The valid attributes are:
70
71            Attribute    Flag  Description
72            x            sgr   x positions of data
73            y            sgr   function values at x positions
74            bc           sgr   boundary conditions
75            g            g     estimated gradient at x positions
76            err          g     error flag
77
78           Given the initial set of points "(x,y)", an estimate of the gradi‐
79           ent is made at these points, using the given boundary conditions.
80           The gradients are stored in the "g" attribute, accessible via:
81
82            $gradient = $obj->get( 'g' );
83
84           However, as this gradient is only calculated 'at the last moment',
85           "g" will only contain data after one of "interpolate", "gradient",
86           or "integrate" is used.
87
88       Boundary conditions for the Hermite routines
89
90       If your data is monotonic, and you are not too bothered about edge
91       effects, then the default value of "bc" of "simple" is for you.  Other‐
92       wise, take a look at the description of PDL::Slatec::chic and use a
93       hash reference for the "bc" attribute, with the following keys:
94
95       monotonic
96          0 if the interpolant is to be monotonic in each interval (so the
97          gradient will be 0 at each switch point), otherwise the gradient is
98          calculated using a 3-point difference formula at switch points.  If
99          > 0 then the interpolant is forced to lie close to the data, if < 0
100          no such control is imposed.  Default = 0.
101
102       start
103          A perl list of one or two elements. The first element defines how
104          the boundary condition for the start of the array is to be calcu‐
105          lated; it has a range of "-5 .. 5", as given for the "ic" parameter
106          of chic.  The second element, only used if options 2, 1, -1, or 2
107          are chosen, contains the value of the "vc" parameter.  Default = [ 0
108          ].
109
110       end
111          As for "start", but for the end of the data.
112
113       An example would be
114
115        $obj->set( bc => { start => [ 1, 0 ], end => [ 1, -1 ] } )
116
117       which sets the first derivative at the first point to 0, and at the
118       last point to -1.
119
120       Errors
121
122       The "status" method provides a simple mechanism to check if the previ‐
123       ous method was successful.  If the function returns an error flag, then
124       it is stored in the "err" attribute.  To find out which routine was
125       used, use the "routine" method.
126

FUNCTIONS

128       PDL::Func::init
129
130        $obj = PDL::Func->init( Interpolate => "Hermite", x => $x, y => $y );
131        $obj = PDL::Func->init( { x => $x, y => $y } );
132
133       Create a PDL::Func object, which can interpolate, and possibly inte‐
134       grate and calculate gradients of a dataset.
135
136       If not specified, the value of Interpolate is taken to be "Linear",
137       which means the interpolation is performed by PDL::Primitive::interpo‐
138       late.  A value of "Hermite" uses piecewise cubic Hermite functions,
139       which also allows the integral and gradient of the data to be esti‐
140       mated.
141
142       Options can either be provided directly to the method, as in the first
143       example, or within a hash reference, as shown in the second example.
144
145       PDL::Func::set
146
147        my $nset = $obj->set( x = $newx, $y => $newy );
148        my $nset = $obj->set( { x = $newx, $y => $newy } );
149
150       Set attributes for a PDL::Func object.
151
152       The return value gives the number of the supplied attributes which were
153       actually set.
154
155       PDL::Func::get
156
157        my $x         = $obj->get( x );
158        my ( $x, $y ) = $obj->get( qw( x y ) );
159
160       Get attributes from a PDL::Func object.
161
162       Given a list of attribute names, return a list of their values; in
163       scalar mode return a scalar value.  If the supplied list contains an
164       unknown attribute, "get" returns a value of "undef" for that attribute.
165
166       PDL::Func::scheme
167
168        my $scheme = $obj->scheme;
169
170       Return the type of interpolation of a PDL::Func object.
171
172       Returns either "Linear" or "Hermite".
173
174       PDL::Func::status
175
176        my $status = $obj->status;
177
178       Returns the status of a PDL::Func object.
179
180       This method provides a high-level indication of the success of the last
181       method called (except for "get" which is ignored).  Returns 1 if every‐
182       thing is okay, 0 if there has been a serious error, and -1 if there was
183       a problem which was not serious.  In the latter case,
184       "$obj->get("err")" may provide more information, depending on the par‐
185       ticular scheme in use.
186
187       PDL::Func::routine
188
189        my $name = $obj->routine;
190
191       Returns the name of the last routine called by a PDL::Func object.
192
193       This is mainly useful for decoding the value stored in the "err"
194       attribute.
195
196       PDL::Func::attributes
197
198        $obj->attributes;
199        PDL::Func->attributes;
200
201       Print out the flags for the attributes of a PDL::Func object.
202
203       Useful in case the documentation is just too opaque!
204
205        PDL::Func->attributes;
206        Flags  Attribute
207         SGR    x
208         SGR    y
209         G      err
210
211       PDL::Func::interpolate
212
213        my $yi = $obj->interpolate( $xi );
214
215       Returns the interpolated function at a given set of points (PDL::Func).
216
217       A status value of -1, as returned by the "status" method, means that
218       some of the $xi points lay outside the range of the data. The values
219       for these points were calculated by extrapolation (the details depend
220       on the scheme being used).
221
222       PDL::Func::gradient
223
224        my $gi          = $obj->gradient( $xi );
225        my ( $yi, $gi ) = $obj->gradient( $xi );
226
227       Returns the derivative and, optionally, the interpolated function for
228       the "Hermite" scheme (PDL::Func).
229
230       PDL::Func::integrate
231
232        my $ans = $obj->integrate( index => pdl( 2, 5 ) );
233        my $ans = $obj->integrate( x => pdl( 2.3, 4.5 ) );
234
235       Integrate the function stored in the PDL::Func object, if the scheme is
236       "Hermite".
237
238       The integration can either be between points of the original "x" array
239       ("index"), or arbitrary x values ("x"). For both cases, a two element
240       piddle should be given, to specify the start and end points of the
241       integration.
242
243       index  The values given refer to the indices of the points in the "x"
244              array.
245
246       x      The array contains the actual values to integrate between.
247
248       If the "status" method returns a value of -1, then one or both of the
249       integration limits did not lie inside the "x" array. Caveat emptor with
250       the result in such a case.
251

TODO

253       It should be relatively easy to provide an interface to other interpo‐
254       lation routines, such as those provided by the Gnu Scientific Library
255       (GSL), or the B-spline routines in the SLATEC library.
256
257       In the documentation, the methods are preceeded by "PDL::Func::" to
258       avoid clashes with functions such as "set" when using the "help" or
259       "apropos" commands within perldl.
260

HISTORY

262       Amalgamated "PDL::Interpolate" and "PDL::Interpolate::Slatec" to form
263       "PDL::Func". Comments greatly appreciated on the current implementa‐
264       tion, as it is not too sensible.
265
266       Thanks to Robin Williams, Halldór Olafsson, and Vince McIntyre.
267

THE FUTURE

269       Robin is working on a new version, that improves on the current version
270       a lot. No time scale though!
271

AUTHOR

273       Copyright (C) 2000,2001 Doug Burke (dburke@cfa.harvard.edu).  All
274       rights reserved. There is no warranty.  You are allowed to redistribute
275       this software / documentation as described in the file COPYING in the
276       PDL distribution.
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280perl v5.8.8                       2000-04-29                           Func(3)
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