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fprime = fnder(f,dorder)
fnder(f)
fprime = fnder(f,dorder) is the description of the dorderth derivative of the function whose description is contained in f. The default value of dorder is 1. For negative dorder, the particular |dorder|th indefinite integral is returned that vanishes |dorder|-fold at the left endpoint of the basic interval.
The output is of the same form as the input, i.e., they are both ppforms or both B-forms or both stforms. fnder does not work for rational splines; for them, use fntlr instead. fnder works for stforms only in a limited way: if the type is tp00, then dorder can be [1,0] or [0,1].
fnder(f) is the same as fnder(f,1).
If the function in f is multivariate, say
-variate, then dorder must
be given, and must be of length
.
If f is in ppform, or in B-form with its last knot of sufficiently high multiplicity, then, up to rounding errors, f and fnder(fnint(f)) are the same.
If f is in ppform and fa is the value of the function in f at the left end of its basic interval, then, up to rounding errors, f and fnint(fnder(f),fa) are the same, unless the function described by f has jump discontinuities.
If f contains the B-form of
, and
is its leftmost
knot, then, up to rounding errors, fnint(fnder(f)) contains
the B-form of
. However, its leftmost knot will
have lost one multiplicity (if it had multiplicity > 1 to begin
with). Also, its rightmost knot will have full multiplicity even if
the rightmost knot for the B-form of
in f doesn't.
Here is an illustration of this last fact. The spline in sp = spmak([0 0 1], 1) is, on its basic interval [0..1], the straight line that is 1 at 0 and 0 at 1. Now integrate its derivative: spdi = fnint(fnder(sp)). As you can check, the spline in spdi has the same basic interval, but, on that interval, it agrees with the straight line that is 0 at 0 and -1 at 1.
See the demos "Intro to B-form" and "Intro to ppform" for examples.
For differentiation of either polynomial form, the derivatives are found in the piecewise-polynomial sense. This means that, in effect, each polynomial piece is differentiated separately, and jump discontinuities between polynomial pieces are ignored during differentiation.
For the B-form, the formulas [PGS; (X.10)] for differentiation are used.
For the stform, differentiation relies on knowing a formula for the relevant derivative of the basis function of the particular type.
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