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共有792项符合/math/的查询结果,以下是第7180项(搜索用时0.001秒)
math/Math-Interpolate-1.06 (Score: 0.31217477)
Perl routines for data sets interpolation and interval search
* 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.
math/Math-String-1.28 (Score: 0.31217477)
Perl module to calculate with strings as if they were big integers
Perl module which lets you calculate with strings (specifically passwords, but not limited to) as if they were big integers.
math/Math-Pari-2.01080800 (Score: 0.31217477)
PARI - numerical/scientific/number-theoretic calculations
This package is a Perl interface to famous library PARI for numerical/scientific/number-theoretic calculations. It allows use of most PARI functions as Perl functions, and (almost) seamless merging of PARI and Perl data.
math/Math-Spline-0.02 (Score: 0.31217477)
Cubic Spline Interpolation of data
This package provides cubic spline interpolation of numeric data. The data is passed as references to two arrays containing the x and y ordinates. It may be used as an exporter of the numerical functions or, more easily as a class module.
math/Math_BigInteger-1.0.3 (Score: 0.31217477)
Pure-PHP arbitrary precision integer arithmetic library
Supports base-2, base-10, base-16, and base-256 numbers. Uses the GMP or BCMath extensions, if available, and an internal implementation, otherwise.
math/Math_Combinatorics-1.0.0 (Score: 0.31217477)
Package that produces combinations and permutations
A package that returns all the combinations and permutations, without repitition, of a given set and subset size. Associative arrays are preserved.
math/Math-Bezier-Convert-0.02 (Score: 0.30871347)
Convert cubic and quadratic Bezier each other
Math::Bezier::Convert provides functions to convert quadratic bezier to cubic, to approximate cubic bezier to quadratic, and to approximate cubic and quadratic bezier to polyline.
math/Math-Prime-XS-0.26 (Score: 0.30871347)
Detect and calculate prime numbers with deterministic tests
Math::Prime::XS detects and calculates prime numbers by either applying Modulo operator division, the Sieve of Eratosthenes, a Summation calculation or Trial division.
Calculate Gaussian Error Propagation
This module extends the functionality of Math::Symbolic by offering facilities to calculate the propagated variance of a function of variables with variances themselves.
Generate parser extensions
This module provides a simple way to extend the Math::Symbolic parser with arbitrary functions that return any valid Math::Symbolic tree. The return value of the function call is inserted into the complete parse tree at the point at which the function call is parsed. Familiarity with the Math::Symbolic module will be assumed throughout the documentation. This module is not object oriented. It does not export anything. You should not call any subroutines directly nor should you modify any class data directly. The complete interface is the call to use Math::SymbolicX::ParserExtensionFactory and its arguments. The reason for the long module name is that you should not have to call it multiple times in your code because it modifies the parser for good. It is intended to be a pain to type. :-) The aim of the module is to allow for hooks into the parser without modifying the parser yourself because that requires rather in-depth knowledge of the module code. By specifying key => value pairs of function names and function implementations (code references) as arguments to the use() call of the module, this module extends the parser that is stored in the $Math::Symbolic::Parser variable with the specified functions and whenever "yourfunction(any argument string not containing an unescaped \) )" occurs in the code, the subroutine reference is called with the argument string as argument. The subroutine is expected to return any Math::Symbolic tree. That means, as of version 0.133, a Math::Symbolic::Operator, a Math::Symbolic::Variable, or a Math::Symbolic::Constant object. The returned object will be incorporated into the Math::Symbolic tree that results from the parse at the exact position at which the custom function call was parsed. Please note that the usage of this module will be quite slow at compile time because it has to regenerate the complete Math::Symbolic parser the first time you use this module in your code. The run time performance penalty should be low, however.