Become an expert in R — Interactive courses, Cheat Sheets, certificates and more!
Get Started for Free

pracma-package

Practical Numerical Math Routines


Description

This package provides R implementations of more advanced functions in numerical analysis, with a special view on on optimization and time series routines. Uses Matlab/Octave function names where appropriate to simplify porting.

Some of these implementations are the result of courses on Scientific Computing (“Wissenschaftliches Rechnen”) and are mostly intended to demonstrate how to implement certain algorithms in R/S. Others are implementations of algorithms found in textbooks.

Details

The package encompasses functions from all areas of numerical analysis, for example:

  • Root finding and minimization of univariate functions,
    e.g. Newton-Raphson, Brent-Dekker, Fibonacci or ‘golden ratio’ search.

  • Handling polynomials, including roots and polynomial fitting,
    e.g. Laguerre's and Muller's methods.

  • Interpolation and function approximation,
    barycentric Lagrange interpolation, Pade and rational interpolation, Chebyshev or trigonometric approximation.

  • Some special functions,
    e.g. Fresnel integrals, Riemann's Zeta or the complex Gamma function, and Lambert's W computed iteratively through Newton's method.

  • Special matrices, e.g. Hankel, Rosser, Wilkinson

  • Numerical differentiation and integration,
    Richardson approach and “complex step” derivatives, adaptive Simpson and Lobatto integration and adaptive Gauss-Kronrod quadrature.

  • Solvers for ordinary differential equations and systems,
    Euler-Heun, classical Runge-Kutta, ode23, or predictor-corrector method such as the Adams-Bashford-Moulton.

  • Some functions from number theory,
    such as primes and prime factorization, extended Euclidean algorithm.

  • Sorting routines, e.g. recursive quickstep.

  • Several functions for string manipulation and regular search, all wrapped and named similar to their Matlab analogues.

It serves three main goals:

  • Collecting R scripts that can be demonstrated in courses on ‘Numerical Analysis’ or ‘Scientific Computing’ using R/S as the chosen programming language.

  • Wrapping functions with appropriate Matlab names to simplify porting programs from Matlab or Octave to R.

  • Providing an environment in which R can be used as a full-blown numerical computing system.

Besides that, many of these functions could be called in R applications as they do not have comparable counterparts in other R packages (at least at this moment, as far as I know).

All referenced books have been utilized in one way or another. Web links have been provided where reasonable.

Note

The following 220 functions are emulations of correspondingly named Matlab functions and bear the same signature as their Matlab cousins if possible:

accumarray, acosd, acot, acotd, acoth, acsc, acscd, acsch, and, angle, ans,
arrayfun, asec, asecd, asech, asind, atand, atan2d,
beep, bernoulli, blank, blkdiag, bsxfun,
cart2pol, cart2sph, cd, ceil, circshift, clear, compan, cond, conv,
cosd, cot, cotd, coth, cross, csc, cscd, csch, cumtrapz,
dblquad, deblank, deconv, deg2rad, detrend, deval, disp, dot,
eig, eigint, ellipj, ellipke, eps, erf, erfc, erfcinv, erfcx, erfi, erfinv,
errorbar, expint, expm, eye, ezcontour, ezmesh, ezplot, ezpolar, ezsurf,
fact, fftshift, figure, findpeaks, findstr, flipdim, fliplr, flipud,
fminbnd, fmincon, fminsearch, fminunc, fplot, fprintf, fsolve, fzero,
gammainc, gcd, geomean, gmres, gradient,
hadamard, hankel, harmmean, hilb, histc, humps, hypot,
idivide, ifft, ifftshift, inpolygon, integral, integral2, integral3,
interp1, interp2, inv, isempty, isprime,
kron,
legendre, linprog, linspace, loglog, logm, logseq, logspace, lsqcurvefit,
lsqlin, lsqnonlin, lsqnonneg, lu,
magic, meshgrid, mkpp, mldivide, mod, mrdivide,
nchoosek, ndims, nextpow2, nnz, normest, nthroot, null, num2str, numel,
ode23, ode23s, ones, or, orth,
pascal, pchip, pdist, pdist2, peaks, perms, piecewise, pinv, plotyy,
pol2cart, polar, polyfit, polyint, polylog, polyval, pow2, ppval,
primes, psi, pwd,
quad, quad2d, quadgk, quadl, quadprog, quadv, quiver,
rad2deg, randi, randn, randsample, rat, rats, regexp, regexpi,
regexpreg, rem, repmat, roots, rosser, rot90, rref, runge,
sec, secd, sech, semilogx, semilogy, sinc, sind, size, sortrows, sph2cart,
sqrtm, squareform, std, str2num, strcat, strcmp, strcmpi,
strfind, strfindi, strjust, subspace,
tand, tic, toc, trapz, tril, trimmean, triplequad, triu,
vander, vectorfield, ver,
what, who, whos, wilkinson,
zeros, zeta

The following Matlab function names have been capitalized in ‘pracma’ to avoid shadowing functions from R base or one of its recommended packages (on request of Bill Venables and because of Brian Ripley's CRAN policies):

Diag, factos, finds, Fix, Imag, Lcm, Mode, Norm, nullspace (<- null),
Poly, Rank, Real, Reshape, strRep, strTrim, Toeplitz, Trace, uniq (<- unique).

To use “ans” instead of “ans()” – as is common practice in Matlab – type (and similar for other Matlab commands):

makeActiveBinding("ans", function() .Last.value, .GlobalEnv)
makeActiveBinding("who", who(), .GlobalEnv)

Author(s)

Hans Werner Borchers

Maintainer: Hans W Borchers <hwborchers@googlemail.com>

References

Abramowitz, M., and I. A. Stegun (1972). Handbook of Mathematical Functions (with Formulas, Graphs, and Mathematical Tables). Dover, New York. URL: https://www.math.ubc.ca/~cbm/aands/notes.htm

Arndt, J. (2010). Matters Computational: Ideas, Algorithms, Source Code. Springer-Verlag, Berlin Heidelberg Dordrecht. FXT: a library of algorithms: https://www.jjj.de/fxt/.

Cormen, Th. H., Ch. E. Leiserson, and R. L. Rivest (2009). Introduction to Algorithms. Third Edition, The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.

Encyclopedia of Mathematics (2012). Editor-in-Chief: Ulf Rehmann. https://encyclopediaofmath.org/wiki/Main_Page.

Gautschi, W. (1997). Numerical Analysis: An Introduction. Birkhaeuser, Boston.

Gentle, J. E. (2009). Computational Statistics. Springer Science+Business Media LCC, New York.

MathWorld.com (2011). Matlab Central: https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/.

NIST: National Institute of Standards and Technology. Olver, F. W. J., et al. (2010). NIST Handbook of Mathematical Functions. Cambridge University Press. Internet: NIST Digital Library of Mathematical Functions, https://dlmf.nist.gov/; Guide to Available Mathematical Software, https://gams.nist.gov/.

Press, W. H., S. A. Teukolsky, W. T Vetterling, and B. P. Flannery (2007). Numerical Recipes: The Art of Numerical Computing. Third Edition, incl. Numerical Recipes Software, Cambridge University Press, New York. URL: numerical.recipes/book/book.html.

Quarteroni, A., R. Sacco, and F. Saleri (2007). Numerical Mathematics. Second Edition, Springer-Verlag, Berlin Heidelberg.

Skiena, St. S. (2008). The Algorithm Design Manual. Second Edition, Springer-Verlag, London. The Stony Brook Algorithm Repository: https://algorist.com/algorist.html.

Stoer, J., and R. Bulirsch (2002). Introduction to Numerical Analysis. Third Edition, Springer-Verlag, New York.

Strang, G. (2007). Computational Science and Engineering. Wellesley-Cambridge Press.

Weisstein, E. W. (2003). CRC Concise Encyclopedia of Mathematics. Second Edition, Chapman & Hall/CRC Press. Wolfram MathWorld: https://mathworld.wolfram.com/.

Zhang, S., and J. Jin (1996). Computation of Special Functions. John Wiley & Sons.

See Also

The R package ‘matlab’ contains some of the basic routines from Matlab, but unfortunately not any of the higher math routines.

Examples

## Not run: 
##  See examples in the help files for all functions.
    
## End(Not run)

pracma

Practical Numerical Math Functions

v2.3.3
GPL (>= 3)
Authors
Hans W. Borchers [aut, cre]
Initial release
2021-01-22

We don't support your browser anymore

Please choose more modern alternatives, such as Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox.