NAME

PDL::GSL::INTERP - PDL interface to Interpolation routines in GSL

DESCRIPTION

This is an interface to the interpolation package present in the GNU Scientific Library.

SYNOPSIS

use PDL;
use PDL::GSL::INTERP;

my $x = sequence(10);
my $y = exp($x);

my $spl = PDL::GSL::INTERP->init('cspline',$x,$y);

my $res = $spl->eval(4.35);
$res = $spl->deriv(4.35);
$res = $spl->deriv2(4.35);
$res = $spl->integ(2.1,7.4);

NOMENCLATURE

Throughout this documentation we strive to use the same variables that are present in the original GSL documentation (see See Also). Oftentimes those variables are called a and b. Since good Perl coding practices discourage the use of Perl variables $a and $b, here we refer to Parameters a and b as $pa and $pb, respectively, and Limits (of domain or integration) as $la and $lb. #line 64 "INTERP.pm"

FUNCTIONS

init

Signature: (double x(n); double y(n); gsl_spline *spl)

The init method initializes a new instance of INTERP. It needs as input an interpolation type and two ndarrays holding the x and y values to be interpolated. The GSL routines require that x be monotonically increasing and a quicksort is performed by default to ensure that. You can skip the quicksort by passing the option {Sort => 0}.

The available interpolation types are :

linear
polynomial
cspline (natural cubic spline)
cspline_periodic (periodic cubic spline)
akima (natural akima spline)
akima_periodic (periodic akima spline)

Please check the GSL documentation for more information.

Usage:

$blessed_ref = PDL::GSL::INTERP->init($interp_method,$x,$y,$opt);

Example:

$x = sequence(10);
$y = exp($x);

$spl = PDL::GSL::INTERP->init('cspline',$x,$y)
$spl = PDL::GSL::INTERP->init('cspline',$x,$y,{Sort => 1}) #same as above

# no sorting done on x, user is certain that x is monotonically increasing
$spl = PDL::GSL::INTERP->init('cspline',$x,$y,{Sort => 0});

init does not process bad values. It will set the bad-value flag of all output ndarrays if the flag is set for any of the input ndarrays.

eval

Signature: (double x(); double [o] out(); gsl_spline *spl;gsl_interp_accel *acc)

The function eval returns the interpolating function at a given point. It will barf with an "input domain error" if you try to extrapolate.

Usage:

$result = $spl->eval($points);

Example:

my $res = $spl->eval($x)

eval processes bad values. It will set the bad-value flag of all output ndarrays if the flag is set for any of the input ndarrays.

deriv

Signature: (double x(); double [o] out(); gsl_spline *spl;gsl_interp_accel *acc)

The deriv function returns the derivative of the interpolating function at a given point. It will barf with an "input domain error" if you try to extrapolate.

Usage:

$result = $spl->deriv($points);

Example:

my $res = $spl->deriv($x)

deriv does not process bad values. It will set the bad-value flag of all output ndarrays if the flag is set for any of the input ndarrays.

deriv2

Signature: (double x(); double [o] out(); gsl_spline *spl;gsl_interp_accel *acc)

The deriv2 function returns the second derivative of the interpolating function at a given point. It will barf with an "input domain error" if you try to extrapolate.

Usage:

$result = $spl->deriv2($points);

Example:

my $res = $spl->deriv2($x)

deriv2 does not process bad values. It will set the bad-value flag of all output ndarrays if the flag is set for any of the input ndarrays.

integ

Signature: (double a(); double b(); double [o] out(); gsl_spline *spl;gsl_interp_accel *acc)

The integ function returns the integral of the interpolating function between two points. It will barf with an "input domain error" if you try to extrapolate.

Usage:

$result = $spl->integ($la,$lb);

Example:

my $res = $spl->integ($la,$lb)

integ does not process bad values. It will set the bad-value flag of all output ndarrays if the flag is set for any of the input ndarrays.

BUGS

Feedback is welcome.

SEE ALSO

PDL

The GSL documentation for interpolation is online at https://www.gnu.org/software/gsl/doc/html/interp.html

AUTHOR

This file copyright (C) 2003 Andres Jordan <andresj@physics.rutgers.edu> All rights reserved. There is no warranty. You are allowed to redistribute this software/documentation under certain conditions. For details, see the file COPYING in the PDL distribution. If this file is separated from the PDL distribution, the copyright notice should be included in the file.

The GSL interpolation module was written by Gerard Jungman.