numeric-prelude-0.4.3.2: An experimental alternative hierarchy of numeric type classes

Copyright(c) Henning Thielemann 2007
Maintainernumericprelude@henning-thielemann.de
Stabilityprovisional
Portabilityportable
Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell98

MathObj.PartialFraction

Contents

Description

Implementation of partial fractions. Useful e.g. for fractions of integers and fractions of polynomials.

For the considered ring the prime factorization must be unique.

Synopsis

Documentation

data T a Source #

Cons z (indexMapFromList [(x0,[y00,y01]), (x1,[y10]), (x2,[y20,y21,y22])]) represents the partial fraction z + y00x0 + y01x0^2 + y10x1 + y20x2 + y21x2^2 + y22x2^3 The denominators x0, x1, x2, ... must be irreducible, but we can't check this in general. It is also not enough to have relatively prime denominators, because when adding two partial fraction representations there might concur denominators that have non-trivial common divisors.

Constructors

Cons a (Map (ToOrd a) [a]) 
Instances
Eq a => Eq (T a) Source # 
Instance details

Defined in MathObj.PartialFraction

Methods

(==) :: T a -> T a -> Bool #

(/=) :: T a -> T a -> Bool #

Show a => Show (T a) Source # 
Instance details

Defined in MathObj.PartialFraction

Methods

showsPrec :: Int -> T a -> ShowS #

show :: T a -> String #

showList :: [T a] -> ShowS #

(C a, C a, C a) => C (T a) Source # 
Instance details

Defined in MathObj.PartialFraction

Methods

zero :: T a Source #

(+) :: T a -> T a -> T a Source #

(-) :: T a -> T a -> T a Source #

negate :: T a -> T a Source #

(C a, C a) => C (T a) Source # 
Instance details

Defined in MathObj.PartialFraction

Methods

(*) :: T a -> T a -> T a Source #

one :: T a Source #

fromInteger :: Integer -> T a Source #

(^) :: T a -> Integer -> T a Source #

fromFractionSum :: C a => a -> [(a, [a])] -> T a Source #

Unchecked construction.

toFractionSum :: C a => T a -> (a, [(a, [a])]) Source #

toFraction :: C a => T a -> T a Source #

toFactoredFraction :: C a => T a -> ([a], a) Source #

C is not really necessary here and only due to invokation of toFraction.

multiToFraction :: C a => a -> [a] -> T a Source #

C is not really necessary here and only due to invokation of %.

hornerRev :: C a => a -> [a] -> a Source #

fromFactoredFraction :: (C a, C a) => [a] -> a -> T a Source #

fromFactoredFraction x y computes the partial fraction representation of y % product x, where the elements of x must be irreducible. The function transforms the factors into their standard form with respect to unit factors.

There are more direct methods for special cases like polynomials over rational numbers where the denominators are linear factors.

fromFactoredFractionAlt :: (C a, C a) => [a] -> a -> T a Source #

multiFromFraction :: C a => [a] -> a -> (a, [a]) Source #

The list of denominators must contain equal elements. Sorry for this hack.

fromValue :: a -> T a Source #

reduceHeads :: C a => T a -> T a Source #

A normalization step which separates the integer part from the leading fraction of each sub-list.

carryRipple :: C a => a -> [a] -> (a, [a]) Source #

Cf. Number.Positional

normalizeModulo :: C a => T a -> T a Source #

A normalization step which reduces all elements in sub-lists modulo their denominators. Zeros might be the result, that must be remove with removeZeros.

removeZeros :: (C a, C a) => T a -> T a Source #

Remove trailing zeros in sub-lists because if lists are converted to fractions by multiToFraction we must be sure that the denominator of the (cancelled) fraction is indeed the stored power of the irreducible denominator. Otherwise mulFrac leads to wrong results.

zipWith :: C a => (a -> a -> a) -> ([a] -> [a] -> [a]) -> T a -> T a -> T a Source #

mulFrac :: C a => T a -> T a -> (a, a) Source #

Transforms a product of two partial fractions into a sum of two fractions. The denominators must be at least relatively prime. Since T requires irreducible denominators, these are also relatively prime.

Example: mulFrac (1%6) (1%4) fails because of the common divisor 2.

mulFrac' :: C a => T a -> T a -> (T a, T a) Source #

mulFracStupid :: C a => T a -> T a -> ((T a, T a), T a) Source #

Works always but simply puts the product into the last fraction.

mulFracOverlap :: C a => T a -> T a -> ((T a, T a), T a) Source #

Also works if the operands share a non-trivial divisor. However the results are quite arbitrary.

scaleFrac :: (C a, C a) => T a -> T a -> T a Source #

Expects an irreducible denominator as associate in standard form.

scaleInt :: (C a, C a) => a -> T a -> T a Source #

mul :: (C a, C a) => T a -> T a -> T a Source #

mulFast :: (C a, C a) => T a -> T a -> T a Source #

Helper functions for work with Maps with Indexable keys

indexMapMapWithKey :: (a -> b -> c) -> Map (ToOrd a) b -> Map (ToOrd a) c Source #

indexMapToList :: Map (ToOrd a) b -> [(a, b)] Source #

indexMapFromList :: C a => [(a, b)] -> Map (ToOrd a) b Source #

mapApplySplit :: Ord a => a -> (c -> c -> c) -> (b -> c) -> (Map a b -> Map a c) -> Map a b -> Map a c Source #

Apply a function on a specific element if it exists, and another function to the rest of the map.