Safe Haskell | None |
---|---|
Language | Haskell98 |
Polynomials and rational functions in a single indeterminate. Polynomials are represented by a list of coefficients. All non-zero coefficients are listed, but there may be extra '0's at the end.
Usage:
Say you have the ring of Integer
numbers
and you want to add a transcendental element x
,
that is an element, which does not allow for simplifications.
More precisely, for all positive integer exponents n
the power x^n
cannot be rewritten as a sum of powers with smaller exponents.
The element x
must be represented by the polynomial [0,1]
.
In principle, you can have more than one transcendental element by using polynomials whose coefficients are polynomials as well. However, most algorithms on multi-variate polynomials prefer a different (sparse) representation, where the ordering of elements is not so fixed.
If you want division, you need Number.Ratios of polynomials with coefficients from a Algebra.Field.
You can also compute with an algebraic element,
that is an element which satisfies an algebraic equation like
x^3-x-1==0
.
Actually, powers of x
with exponents above 3
can be simplified,
since it holds x^3==x+1
.
You can perform these computations with Number.ResidueClass of polynomials,
where the divisor is the polynomial equation that determines x
.
If the polynomial is irreducible
(in our case x^3-x-1
cannot be written as a non-trivial product)
then the residue classes also allow unrestricted division
(except by zero, of course).
That is, using residue classes of polynomials
you can work with roots of polynomial equations
without representing them by radicals
(powers with fractional exponents).
It is well-known, that roots of polynomials of degree above 4
may not be representable by radicals.
- data T a
- fromCoeffs :: [a] -> T a
- coeffs :: T a -> [a]
- degree :: C a => T a -> Maybe Int
- showsExpressionPrec :: (Show a, C a, C a) => Int -> String -> T a -> String -> String
- const :: a -> T a
- evaluate :: C a => T a -> a -> a
- evaluateCoeffVector :: C a v => T v -> a -> v
- evaluateArgVector :: (C a v, C v) => T a -> v -> v
- collinear :: (Eq a, C a) => T a -> T a -> Bool
- integrate :: C a => a -> T a -> T a
- compose :: C a => T a -> T a -> T a
- fromRoots :: C a => [a] -> T a
- reverse :: C a => T a -> T a
- translate :: C a => a -> T a -> T a
- dilate :: C a => a -> T a -> T a
- shrink :: C a => a -> T a -> T a
Documentation
Functor T | |
C T | |
C a b => C a (T b) | |
(C a, C a b) => C a (T b) | |
(Eq a, C a) => Eq (T a) | |
Fractional a => Fractional (T a) | |
Num a => Num (T a) | |
Show a => Show (T a) | |
(Arbitrary a, C a) => Arbitrary (T a) | |
(C a, C a) => C (T a) | |
C a => C (T a) | |
C a => C (T a) | |
C a => C (T a) | |
C a => C (T a) | |
(C a, C a) => C (T a) | The |
(C a, C a) => C (T a) | |
(C a, C a) => C (T a) |
fromCoeffs :: [a] -> T a Source
evaluateCoeffVector :: C a v => T v -> a -> v Source
Here the coefficients are vectors, for example the coefficients are real and the coefficents are real vectors.
evaluateArgVector :: (C a v, C v) => T a -> v -> v Source
Here the argument is a vector, for example the coefficients are complex numbers or square matrices and the coefficents are reals.