NAME
Math::GSL::Chebyshev - Univariate Chebyshev Series Approximation
SYNOPSIS
use Math::GSL::Chebyshev qw/:all/;
my $cheb             = gsl_cheb_alloc(40);
my $function         = sub { sin(cos($_[0])) };
gsl_cheb_init($cheb, $function, 0, 10);
my $x                = gsl_cheb_eval($cheb, 5.5 );
my ($status,$y,$err) = gsl_cheb_eval_err($cheb, 7.5 );
gsl_cheb_free($cheb);DESCRIPTION
- gsl_cheb_alloc($size)- my $cheb = gsl_cheb_alloc(50);- Allocates a new Chebyshev object with $size sample points. 
- gsl_cheb_free($cheb)- Deallocates memory associated to $cheb. Returns void. 
- gsl_cheb_init($cheb,$function, $lower, $upper)- gsl_cheb_init($cheb, sub { sin(cos($_[0])) }, 0, 10 );- Initiate a Chebyshev object with a function and upper and lower bounds. Returns void. 
- gsl_cheb_eval($function, $value)- my $evaluated = gsl_cheb_eval($cheb, 5 );- Returns a Perl scalar of the Chebyshev object $cheb evaluated at $value. 
- gsl_cheb_eval_err($cheb, $value)- my ($status,$evaluated,$err) = gsl_cheb_eval($cheb, 5 );- Returns a list consisting of a GSL status code, the evaluate value and the estimated error of the evaluation. 
- gsl_cheb_eval_n
- gsl_cheb_eval_n_err
- gsl_cheb_eval_mode
- gsl_cheb_eval_mode_e
- gsl_cheb_calc_deriv($deriv,$cheb)- my $status = gsl_cheb_calc_deriv( $deriv, $cheb );- This will calculate the derivative of $cheb and stores it in $deriv, which must be pre-allocated. Returns a GSL status code. 
- gsl_cheb_calc_integ($integ,$cheb)- my $status = gsl_cheb_calc_integ( $deriv, $cheb );- This will calculate the derivative of $cheb and stores it in $deriv, which must be pre-allocated. Returns a GSL status code. 
For more informations on the functions, we refer you to the GSL official documentation: http://www.gnu.org/software/gsl/manual/html_node/
AUTHORS
Jonathan "Duke" Leto <jonathan@leto.net> and Thierry Moisan <thierry.moisan@gmail.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2008-2024 Jonathan "Duke" Leto and Thierry Moisan
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.