Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Neil Toronto
155ec7dc41 Reviewing and refactoring `math/matrix', part 1
* Finally added `array-axis-expand' as a dual for `array-axis-reduce'
  in order to implement `vandermonde-matrix' elegantly

* Better, shorter matrix multiply; reworked all matrix arithmetic

* Split "matrix-operations.rkt" into at least 5 parts:
 * "matrix-operations.rkt"
 * "matrix-basic.rkt"
 * "matrix-comprehension.rkt"
 * "matrix-sequences.rkt"
 * "matrix-column.rkt"

Added "matrix-constructors.rkt"

Added `matrix', `row-matrix', and `col-matrix' macros

A lot of other little changes

Currently, `in-row' and `in-column' are broken. I intend to implement
them in a way that makes them work in untyped and Typed Racket.
2012-12-20 17:32:16 -07:00
Neil Toronto
5a43f2c6bc Finished array documentation!
Cleaned up other docs in preparation for alpha-testing announcement

Created `math/utils' module for stuff that doesn't go anywhere else (e.g.
FFT scaling convention, max-math-threads parameters)

Reduced the number of macros that expand to applications of `array-map'

Added `flvector-sum', defined `flsum' in terms of it

Reduced the number of pointwise `flvector', `flarray' and `fcarray' operations

Reworked `inline-build-flvector' and `inline-flvector-map' to be faster and
expand to less code in both typed and untyped Racket

Redefined conversions like `list->flvector' in terms of for loops (can do
it now that TR has working `for/flvector:', etc.)
2012-11-29 15:45:17 -07:00
Neil Toronto
f2dc2027f6 Initial math library commit. The history for these changes is preserved
in the original GitHub fork:

  https://github.com/ntoronto/racket

Some things about this are known to be broken (most egregious is that the
array tests DO NOT RUN because of a problem in typed/rackunit), about half
has no coverage in the tests, and half has no documentation. Fixes and
docs are coming. This is committed now to allow others to find errors and
inconsistency in the things that appear to be working, and to give the
author a (rather incomplete) sense of closure.
2012-11-16 11:39:51 -07:00