* Gram-Schmidt using vector type
* QR decomposition
* Operator 1-norm and maximum norm; stub for 2-norm and angle between
subspaces (`matrix-basis-angle')
* `matrix-absolute-error' and `matrix-relative-error'; also predicates
based on them, such as `matrix-identity?'
* Lots of shuffling code about
* Types that can have contracts, and an exhaustive test to make sure
every value exported by `math/matrix' has a contract when used in
untyped code
* Some more tests (still needs some)
For now, SGC must be used, but `configure' does not select it
automatically.
Also, support Cygwin (in addition to MSYS) as a build environment
when using MinGW compilers. Since I build in a Cygwin environment
(which seemed to be the easiest way to get MinGW-w64 gcc), I use
../configure --host=x86_64-w64-mingw32 --enable-sgc
The synchronization result of a log receiver is now a vector of four
values, instead of three, where the last one reports the name.
Also, an optional argument to `make-logger' provides a notification
callback for each event sent to the logger.
These changes enable more control over loggers and events. Suppose
that you have processes A and B, and you want all log events of A
to be visible to B, but not vice-versa. Furthermore, you want the
log events to appear at B in the right order: if A logs an event
before B, then A's event should arrive at a log receiver's before
B's. Now that a log receiver gets the name associated with the
original event, and now that the name can be re-sent in a
`log-receiver', it's possible to give A and B separate loggers and
send all of the events from A's logger to B's logger. Furthermore,
you can use the notification callback so that when an event is logged
in B, you can make sure that all available events from from A's
logger have been transferred to B's logger.
One drawback to the current situation (after this commit) is that all
log messages are sent into the user's logger, even messages that come
about as part of DrRacket's implementation. It isn't clear how to fix
this without enumerating all of the possible messages to share and
explicitly forwarding them (both of which are suboptimal things).
On the plus side, the GUI now uses the "debug@GC" notation in a text
field, and when the logger pane is not open, there is no extra work
going on. Plus other, minor GUI improvements.