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authorMario Sergio Fujikawa Ferreira <lioux@FreeBSD.org>2002-11-23 18:04:16 +0000
committerMario Sergio Fujikawa Ferreira <lioux@FreeBSD.org>2002-11-23 18:04:16 +0000
commit552d7096ecf931d6e059e3a4017d5ef7f5004d8e (patch)
treef83ffad8c8606cd2c20bb46015dfd1abf2de8366 /math/p5-Math-Interpolate
parentd971cd249b512ad864eaa549e61a06b22d8b6b6c (diff)
downloadports-552d7096ecf931d6e059e3a4017d5ef7f5004d8e.tar.gz
ports-552d7096ecf931d6e059e3a4017d5ef7f5004d8e.zip
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Diffstat (limited to 'math/p5-Math-Interpolate')
-rw-r--r--math/p5-Math-Interpolate/pkg-descr46
1 files changed, 23 insertions, 23 deletions
diff --git a/math/p5-Math-Interpolate/pkg-descr b/math/p5-Math-Interpolate/pkg-descr
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--- a/math/p5-Math-Interpolate/pkg-descr
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@@ -1,24 +1,24 @@
-This module contains several useful routines for interpolating data
-sets and finding where a given value lies in a sorted list.
-The first is a subroutine used to locate a position in an array of
-values where a given value would fit using bisection. It has been
-designed to be efficient in the common situation that it is called
-repeatedly. The user can supply a different set of comparison
-operators to replace the standard < and <=. For example, given a
-list (1, 2, 5, 8, 15) and the number 9.5 it would return 3.
+* This module contains several useful routines for interpolating
+ data sets and finding where a given value lies in a sorted list.
+ The first is a subroutine used to locate a position in an array
+ of values where a given value would fit using bisection. It has
+ been designed to be efficient in the common situation that it is
+ called repeatedly. The user can supply a different set of comparison
+ operators to replace the standard < and <=. For example, given a
+ list (1, 2, 5, 8, 15) and the number 9.5 it would return 3.
+* The remaining routines all are related to interpolating sets of
+ (x,y) data pairs. They all take a list of (x,y) data pairs given
+ another x value, return a sensible y value using the list of (x,y)
+ data pairs. Three different interpolating functions are provided.
+ The first, called a constant interpolator, assumes that the
+ function being interpolated moves in non-linear jumps from one
+ value to another. The interpolated value for some value x is the
+ y value of the neighboring (x,y) to the left of the given x. The
+ second interpolator performs a linear interpolation between the
+ neighboring points. The third interpolator is called the robust
+ interpolator and interpolates a smooth curve between all of the
+ (x,y) pairs. To do the interpolation, it first calculates some
+ reasonable derivatives at the (x,y) pairs. The robust interpolator
+ can also use derivative information supplied by the user.
-The remaining routines all are related to interpolating sets of
-(x,y) data pairs. They all take a list of (x,y) data pairs given
-another x value, return a sensible y value using the list of (x,y)
-data pairs. Three different interpolating functions are provided.
-The first, called a constant interpolator, assumes that the function
-being interpolated moves in non-linear jumps from one value to
-another. The interpolated value for some value x is the y value of
-the neighboring (x,y) to the left of the given x. The second
-interpolator performs a linear interpolation between the neighboring
-points. The third interpolator is called the robust interpolator
-and interpolates a smooth curve between all of the (x,y) pairs.
-To do the interpolation, it first calculates some reasonable
-derivatives at the (x,y) pairs. If you have measured your own
-derivative information, you can supply it to the robust interpolator
-and it will use it.
+WWW: http://search.cpan.org/search?dist=Math-Interpolate