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The polynom
package is an R collection of functions to
implement a class for univariate polynomial manipulations. It is based
on the corresponding S package by Bill Venables
<Bill.Venables@gmail.com>
, and was adapted to R by
Kurt Hornik <Kurt.Hornik@R-project.org>
and Martin
Maechler <maechler@stat.math.ethz.ch>
.
This document is based on the original ‘NOTES’, with minor updates.
The following started as a straightforward programming exercise in operator overloading, but seems to be more generally useful. The goal is to write a polynomial class, that is a suite of facilities that allow operations on polynomials: addition, subtraction, multiplication, “division”, remaindering, printing, plotting, and so forth, to be conducted using the same operators and functions, and hence with the same ease, as ordinary arithmetic, plotting, printing, and so on.
The class is limited to univariate polynomials, and so they may therefore be uniquely defined by their numeric coefficient vector. Coercing a polynomial to numeric yields this coefficient vector as a numeric vector.
For reasons of simplicity it is limited to REAL polynomials; handling polynomials with complex coefficients would be a simple extension. Dealing with polynomials with polynomial coefficients, and hence multivariate polynomials, would be feasible, though a major undertaking and the result would be very slow and of rather limited usefulness and efficiency.
The function polynomial()
creates an object of class
polynomial
from a numeric coefficient vector. Coefficient
vectors are assumed to apply to the powers of the carrier variable in
increasing order, that is, in the truncated power series form,
and in the same form as required by polyroot()
, the system
function for computing zeros of polynomials. (As a matter or
terminology, the zeros of the polynomial \(P(x)\) are the same as the roots
of equation \(P(x) = 0\).)
Polynomials may also be created by specifying a set of (x, y) pairs
and constructing the Lagrange interpolation polynomial that passes
through them (poly.calc(x, y)
). If y
is a
matrix, an interpolation polynomial is calculated for each column and
the result is a list of polynomials (of class
polylist
).
The third way polynomials are commonly generated is via its zeros
using poly.calc(z)
, which creates the monic polynomial of
lowest degree with the values in z
as its zeros.
The core facility provided is the group method function
Ops.polynomial()
, which allows arithmetic operations to be
performed on polynomial arguments using ordinary arithmetic
operators.
+
, -
and *
have their
obvious meanings for polynomials.
^
is limited to non-negative integer
powers.
/
returns the polynomial quotient. If division is
not exact the remainder is discarded, (but see 4.)
%%
returns the polynomial remainder, so that if all
arguments are polynomials, p1 * (p2 / p1) + p2 %% p1
is the
same polynomial as p2
, provided p1
is not the
zero polynomial.
If numeric vectors are used in polynomial arithmetic they are coerced to polynomial, which could be a source of surprise. In the case of scalars, though, the result is natural.
Some logical operations are allowed, but not always very
satisfactorily. ==
and !=
mean exact equality
or not, respectively, however <
, <=
,
>
, >=
, !
, |
and &
are not allowed at all and cause stops in the
calculation.
Most Math group functions are disallowed with polynomial
arguments. The only exceptions are ceiling
,
floor
, round
, trunc
, and
signif
.
Summary group functions are not implemented, apart from
sum
and prod
.
Polynomials may be evaluated at specific x values either directly
using predict(p, x)
, or indirectly using
as.function(p)
, which creates a function to evaluate the
polynomial, and then using the result.
The print method for polynomials can be slow and is a bit
pretentious. The plotting methods (plot(p)
,
lines(p)
, points(p)
) are fairly nominal, but
may prove useful.
Find the Hermite polynomials up to degree 5 and plot them. Also plot their derivatives and integrals on separate plots.
The polynomials in question satisfy \[ \begin{aligned} He_0(x) &= 1,\\ He_1(x) &= x,\\ He_n(x) &= x He_{n-1}(x) - (n - 1) He_{n-2}(x), \qquad n = 2, 3, \ldots \end{aligned} \]
He <- list(polynomial(1), polynomial(0:1))
x <- polynomial()
for (n in 3:6) {
He[[n]] <- x * He[[n-1]] - (n-2) * He[[n-2]] ## R indices start from 1, not 0
}
He <- as.polylist(He)
plot(He)
plot(deriv(He))
plot(integral(He))
x <- c(0,1,2,4)
(op <- poly.orth(x))
List of polynomials:
[[1]]
0.5
[[2]]
-0.591608 + 0.3380617*x
[[3]]
0.5640761 - 1.168443*x + 0.282038*x^2
[[4]]
-0.2860388 + 3.114644*x - 2.502839*x^2 + 0.4370037*x^3
(fop <- lapply(op, as.function))
[[1]]
function (x)
{
w <- 0
w <- 0.5 + x * w
w
}
<environment: 0x00000000159b7880>
[[2]]
function (x)
{
w <- 0
w <- 0.338061701891407 + x * w
w <- -0.591607978309962 + x * w
w
}
<environment: 0x00000000159bdf80>
[[3]]
function (x)
{
w <- 0
w <- 0.282038037408883 + x * w
w <- -1.1684432978368 + x * w
w <- 0.564076074817766 + x * w
w
}
<environment: 0x00000000159bec40>
[[4]]
function (x)
{
w <- 0
w <- 0.437003686737563 + x * w
w <- -2.50283929676968 + x * w
w <- 3.11464445820226 + x * w
w <- -0.286038776773677 + x * w
w
}
<environment: 0x00000000159c5298>
(P <- sapply(fop, function(f) f(x)))
[,1] [,2] [,3] [,4]
[1,] 0.5 -0.59160798 0.5640761 -0.28603878
[2,] 0.5 -0.25354628 -0.3223292 0.76277007
[3,] 0.5 0.08451543 -0.6446584 -0.57207755
[4,] 0.5 0.76063883 0.4029115 0.09534626
zapsmall(crossprod(P)) ### Verify orthonormality
[,1] [,2] [,3] [,4]
[1,] 1 0 0 0
[2,] 0 1 0 0
[3,] 0 0 1 0
[4,] 0 0 0 1
(p1 <- poly.calc(1:6))
720 - 1764*x + 1624*x^2 - 735*x^3 + 175*x^4 - 21*x^5 + x^6
(p2 <- change.origin(p1, 3))
-12*x + 4*x^2 + 15*x^3 - 5*x^4 - 3*x^5 + x^6
predict(p1, 0:7)
[1] 720 0 0 0 0 0 0 720
predict(p2, 0:7)
[1] 0 0 0 0 720 5040 20160 60480
predict(p2, 0:7 - 3)
[1] 720 0 0 0 0 0 0 720
(p3 <- (p1 - 2 * p2)^2) # moderate arithmetic expression.
518400 - 2505600*x + 5354640*x^2 - 6725280*x^3 + 5540056*x^4 - 3137880*x^5 +
1233905*x^6 - 328050*x^7 + 53943*x^8 - 4020*x^9 - 145*x^10 + 30*x^11 + x^12
fp3 <- as.function(p3) # should have 1, 2, 3 as zeros
fp3(0:4)
[1] 518400 0 0 0 2073600
x <- 80:89
y <- c(487, 370, 361, 313, 246, 234, 173, 128, 88, 83)
p <- poly.calc(x, y) ## leads to catastropic numerical failure!
predict(p, x) - y
[1] 38.5 45.5 44.0 16.0 90.0 96.5 62.0 34.5 -2.5 28.0
p1 <- poly.calc(x - 84, y) ## changing origin fixes the problem
predict(p1, x - 84) - y
[1] 7.389644e-12 1.989520e-12 3.410605e-13 0.000000e+00 0.000000e+00
[6] 5.684342e-14 1.421085e-13 -2.842171e-14 -3.296918e-12 -2.199840e-11
plot(p1, xlim = c(80, 89) - 84, xlab = "x - 84")
points(x - 84, y, col = "red", cex = 2)
#### Can we now write the polynomial in "raw" form?
p0 <- as.function(p1)(polynomial() - 84) ## attempt to change the origin back to zero
## leads to problems again
plot(p0, xlim = c(80, 89))
points(x, y, col = "red", cex = 2) ## major numerical errors due to finite precision
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.