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Page 215 of 2547
Subtract one Chebyshev series from another in Python
To subtract one Chebyshev series from another, use the polynomial.chebyshev.chebsub() method in NumPy. The method returns an array of Chebyshev series coefficients representing their difference c1 - c2. The sequences of coefficients are ordered from lowest to highest order term, i.e., [1, 2, 3] represents the series T_0 + 2*T_1 + 3*T_2. Syntax numpy.polynomial.chebyshev.chebsub(c1, c2) Parameters The parameters c1 and c2 are 1-D arrays of Chebyshev series coefficients ordered from low to high degree terms. Basic Example Let's start with a simple example of subtracting two Chebyshev series ? import ...
Read MoreAdd one Chebyshev series to another in Python
To add one Chebyshev series to another, use the polynomial.chebyshev.chebadd() method in Python NumPy. The method returns an array representing the Chebyshev series of their sum. The arguments are sequences of coefficients ordered from lowest order term to highest, i.e., [1, 2, 3] represents the series T_0 + 2*T_1 + 3*T_2. Syntax numpy.polynomial.chebyshev.chebadd(c1, c2) Parameters c1, c2 − 1-D arrays of Chebyshev series coefficients ordered from low to high. Basic Example Let's start with a simple example of adding two Chebyshev series ? import numpy as np from numpy.polynomial import ...
Read MoreRemove small trailing coefficients from a polynomial in Python
To remove small trailing coefficients from a polynomial, use the polynomial.polytrim() method in Python NumPy. The method returns a 1-d array with trailing zeros removed. If the resulting series would be empty, a series containing a single zero is returned. The "Small" means "small in absolute value" and is controlled by the parameter tol; "trailing" means highest order coefficient(s). For example, in [0, 1, 1, 0, 0] (which represents 0 + x + x² + 0*x³ + 0*x⁴), both the 3rd and 4th order coefficients would be "trimmed". The parameter c is a 1-d array of coefficients, ordered from ...
Read MoreGet the Least-squares fit of a polynomial to data in Python
To get the least-squares fit of a polynomial to data in Python, we use numpy.polynomial.polynomial.polyfit(). This function finds the polynomial coefficients that best fit the given data points using the method of least squares. Syntax numpy.polynomial.polynomial.polyfit(x, y, deg, rcond=None, full=False, w=None) Parameters x − The x-coordinates of the sample points y − The y-coordinates of the sample points deg − Degree of the fitting polynomial rcond − Relative condition number (default: len(x)*eps) full − If True, returns diagnostic information (default: False) w − Weights for data points (default: None) Return Value ...
Read MoreReturn the companion matrix of a 1-D array of polynomial coefficients in Python
To return the companion matrix of a 1-D array of polynomial coefficients, use the polynomial.polycompanion() method in Python NumPy. The companion matrix for power series cannot be made symmetric by scaling the basis, so this function differs from those for orthogonal polynomials. The method returns a companion matrix of dimensions (deg, deg) where deg is the degree of the polynomial. Syntax The syntax for creating a companion matrix is ? numpy.polynomial.polynomial.polycompanion(c) Parameters: c: A 1-D array of polynomial coefficients ordered from low to high degree Basic Example Let's create a ...
Read MoreGenerate a Pseudo-Vandermonde matrix of given degree and x, y, z complex array of points in Python
To generate a pseudo-Vandermonde matrix of given degree and sample points (x, y, z), use the polynomial.polyvander3d() function in NumPy. This method returns the pseudo-Vandermonde matrix of degrees deg and sample points (x, y, z). Syntax numpy.polynomial.polynomial.polyvander3d(x, y, z, deg) Parameters x, y, z − Arrays of point coordinates, all of the same shape. The dtypes will be converted to either float64 or complex128 depending on whether any of the elements are complex. Scalars are converted to 1-D arrays. deg − List of maximum degrees of the form [x_deg, y_deg, z_deg] ...
Read MoreGenerate a Pseudo-Vandermonde matrix of given degree and x, y, z floating array of points in Python
To generate a Vandermonde matrix of given degree and sample points (x, y, z), use the polynomial.polyvander3d() in Python NumPy. The method returns the pseudo-Vandermonde matrix of degrees deg and sample points (x, y, z). The parameter, x, y, z are the arrays of point coordinates, all of the same shape. The dtypes will be converted to either float64 or complex128 depending on whether any of the elements are complex. Scalars are converted to 1-D arrays. The parameter, deg is the list of maximum degrees of the form [x_deg, y_deg, z_deg]. Syntax numpy.polynomial.polynomial.polyvander3d(x, y, z, deg) ...
Read MoreGenerate a Pseudo-Vandermonde matrix of given degree and x, y, z sample points in Python
To generate a pseudo Vandermonde matrix of given degree and x, y, z sample points, use the polynomial.polyvander3d() function in NumPy. This method returns a pseudo-Vandermonde matrix of degrees deg and sample points (x, y, z). The parameters x, y, z are arrays of point coordinates with the same shape, and deg is a list of maximum degrees of the form [x_deg, y_deg, z_deg]. Syntax numpy.polynomial.polynomial.polyvander3d(x, y, z, deg) Parameters x, y, z: Arrays of point coordinates, all of the same shape. The dtypes will be converted to either float64 or complex128 depending on ...
Read MoreGenerate a Vandermonde matrix of given degree with complex array of points in Python
To generate a Vandermonde matrix of given degree with complex array points, use the numpy.polynomial.polynomial.polyvander() function. This method returns a Vandermonde matrix where each column represents successive powers of the input array elements. The polyvander() function takes an array of points and a degree parameter. The shape of the returned matrix is x.shape + (deg + 1, ), where the last index represents the power of x. The dtype will be the same as the converted input array. Syntax numpy.polynomial.polynomial.polyvander(x, deg) Parameters x: Array of points. The dtype is converted to float64 or ...
Read MoreGenerate a Vandermonde matrix of given degree in Python
To generate a Vandermonde matrix of given degree, use the polynomial.polyvander() function in Python NumPy. The method returns the Vandermonde matrix where each row represents the powers of the corresponding input value. The shape of the returned matrix is x.shape + (deg + 1, ), where the last index is the power of x. Syntax numpy.polynomial.polynomial.polyvander(x, deg) Parameters The function accepts the following parameters ? x ? Array of points. The dtype is converted to float64 or complex128 depending on whether any elements are complex. If x is scalar, it is converted ...
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