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.\" RCSid "$Id: tabfunc.1,v 1.2 2003/12/09 15:59:07 greg Exp $"
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.TH TABFUNC 1 10/8/97 RADIANCE
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.SH NAME
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tabfunc - convert table to functions for rcalc, etc.
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.B tabfunc
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[
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.B \-i
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]
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func1 [func2 ..]
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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.I Tabfunc
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reads a table of numbers from the standard input and converts it to
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an expression suitable for
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greg |
1.3 |
.I icalc(1),
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greg |
1.1 |
.I rcalc(1)
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and their cousins.
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The input must consist of a M x N matrix of real numbers, with exactly
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one row per line.
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The number of columns must always be the same in each line,
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separated by whitespace and/or commas, with no missing values.
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The first column is always the independent variable, whose value
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indexes all of the other elements.
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This value does not need to be evenly spaced, but it must be either
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monotonically increasing or monotonically decreasing.
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(I.e. it cannot go up and then down, or down and then up.)\0
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Maximum input line width is 4096 characters and the maximum number of
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data rows is 1024.
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Input lines not beginning with a numerical value will be silently ignored.
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.PP
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The command-line arguments given to
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.I tabfunc
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are the names to be assigned to each column.
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.I Tabfunc
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then produces a single function for each column given.
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If there are some columns which should be skipped, the dummy name
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"0" may be given instead of a valid identifier.
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(It is not necessary to specify a dummy name for extra columns at
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the end of the matrix.)\0
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.PP
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The
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.I \-i
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option causes
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.I tabfunc
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to produce a description that will interpolate values in between
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those given for the independent variable on the input.
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.SH EXAMPLE
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To convert a small data table and feed it to rcalc for some
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calculation:
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.IP "" .2i
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rcalc -e `tabfunc f1 f2 < table.dat` -f com.cal
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.SH AUTHOR
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Greg Ward
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.SH "SEE ALSO"
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greg |
1.3 |
cnt(1), icalc(1), neaten(1), rcalc(1), rlam(1), total(1)
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