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author | William Joye <wjoye@cfa.harvard.edu> | 2017-01-04 19:54:17 (GMT) |
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committer | William Joye <wjoye@cfa.harvard.edu> | 2017-01-04 19:54:17 (GMT) |
commit | f654b92094d21d5b3d197edc505799f1b9cd3c44 (patch) | |
tree | 5a58d68e4e2e2b19d9ca7fa2be2ff634e57e3a8c /tkblt/doc/vector.n | |
parent | dc750f3e329a241f24831da739509d90c996ec20 (diff) | |
parent | ba1a25c6143d0f853d1d6225611d0c4222f9cfec (diff) | |
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Merge commit 'ba1a25c6143d0f853d1d6225611d0c4222f9cfec' as 'tkblt'
Diffstat (limited to 'tkblt/doc/vector.n')
-rw-r--r-- | tkblt/doc/vector.n | 1134 |
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diff --git a/tkblt/doc/vector.n b/tkblt/doc/vector.n new file mode 100644 index 0000000..fa8bb7e --- /dev/null +++ b/tkblt/doc/vector.n @@ -0,0 +1,1134 @@ +'\" +'\" Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge, MA, USA +'\" This code has been modified under the terms listed below and is made +'\" available under the same terms. +'\" +'\" Copyright 1991-1997 by Lucent Technologies, Inc. +'\" +'\" Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its +'\" documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, provided +'\" that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that the +'\" copyright notice and warranty disclaimer appear in supporting documentation, +'\" and that the names of Lucent Technologies any of their entities not be used +'\" in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the software +'\" without specific, written prior permission. +'\" +'\" Lucent Technologies disclaims all warranties with regard to this software, +'\" including all implied warranties of merchantability and fitness. In no event +'\" shall Lucent Technologies be liable for any special, indirect or +'\" consequential damages or any damages whatsoever resulting from loss of use, +'\" data or profits, whether in an action of contract, negligence or other +'\" tortuous action, arising out of or in connection with the use or performance +'\" of this software. +'\" +'\" Vector command created by George Howlett. +'\" +.TH blt::vector n BLT_VERSION BLT "BLT Built-In Commands" +.BS +'\" Note: do not modify the .SH NAME line immediately below! +.SH NAME +\fBvector\fR \- Vector data type for Tcl +.SH SYNOPSIS +\fBblt::vector create \fIvecName \fR?\fIvecName\fR...? ?\fIswitches\fR? +.sp +\fBblt::vector destroy \fIvecName \fR?\fIvecName\fR...? +.sp +\fBblt::vector expr \fIexpression\fR +.sp +\fBblt::vector names \fR?\fIpattern\fR...? +.BE +.SH DESCRIPTION +The \fBvector\fR command creates an array of floating point +values. The vector's components can be manipulated in three ways: +through a Tcl array variable, a Tcl command, or the C API. +.SH INTRODUCTION +A vector is an ordered set of real numbers. The components of a +vector are indexed by integers. +.PP +Vectors are common data structures for many applications. For +example, a graph may use two vectors to represent the X-Y +coordinates of the data plotted. The graph will automatically +be redrawn when the vectors are updated or changed. By using vectors, +you can separate +data analysis from the graph widget. This makes it easier, for +example, to add data transformations, such as splines. It's possible +to plot the same data to in multiple graphs, where each graph presents +a different view or scale of the data. +.PP +You could try to use Tcl's associative arrays as vectors. Tcl arrays +are easy to use. You can access individual elements randomly by +specifying the index, or the set the entire array by providing a list +of index and value pairs for each element. The disadvantages of +associative arrays as vectors lie in the fact they are implemented as +hash tables. +.TP 2 +\(bu +There's no implied ordering to the associative arrays. If you used +vectors for plotting, you would want to insure the second component +comes after the first, an so on. This isn't possible since arrays +are actually hash tables. For example, you can't get a range of +values between two indices. Nor can you sort an array. +.TP 2 +\(bu +Arrays consume lots of memory when the number of elements becomes +large (tens of thousands). This is because each element's index and +value are stored as strings in the hash table. +.TP 2 +\(bu +The C programming interface is unwieldy. Normally with vectors, you +would like to view the Tcl array as you do a C array, as an array of +floats or doubles. But with hash tables, you must convert both the +index and value to and from decimal strings, just to access +an element in the array. This makes it cumbersome to perform operations on +the array as a whole. +.PP +The \fBvector\fR command tries to overcome these disadvantages while +still retaining the ease of use of Tcl arrays. The \fBvector\fR +command creates both a new Tcl command and associate array which are +linked to the vector components. You can randomly access vector +components though the elements of array. Not have all indices are +generated for the array, so printing the array (using the \fBparray\fR +procedure) does not print out all the component values. You can use +the Tcl command to access the array as a whole. You can copy, append, +or sort vector using its command. If you need greater performance, or +customized behavior, you can write your own C code to manage vectors. +.SH EXAMPLE +You create vectors using the \fBvector\fR command and its \fBcreate\fR +operation. +.CS +# Create a new vector. +blt::vector create y(50) +.CE +This creates a new vector named \f(CWy\fR. It has fifty components, by +default, initialized to \f(CW0.0\fR. In addition, both a Tcl command +and array variable, both named \f(CWy\fR, are created. You can use +either the command or variable to query or modify components of the +vector. +.CS +# Set the first value. +set y(0) 9.25 +puts "y has [y length] components" +.CE +The array \f(CWy\fR can be used to read or set individual components of +the vector. Vector components are indexed from zero. The array index +must be a number less than the number of components. For example, +it's an error if you try to set the 51st element of \f(CWy\fR. +.CS +# This is an error. The vector only has 50 components. +set y(50) 0.02 +.CE +You can also specify a range of indices using a colon (:) to separate +the first and last indices of the range. +.CS +# Set the first six components of y +set y(0:5) 25.2 +.CE +If you don't include an index, then it will default to the first +and/or last component of the vector. +.CS +# Print out all the components of y +puts "y = $y(:)" +.CE +There are special non-numeric indices. The index \f(CWend\fR, specifies +the last component of the vector. It's an error to use this index if +the vector is empty (length is zero). The index \f(CW++end\fR can be +used to extend the vector by one component and initialize it to a specific +value. You can't read from the array using this index, though. +.CS +# Extend the vector by one component. +set y(++end) 0.02 +.CE +The other special indices are \f(CWmin\fR and \f(CWmax\fR. They return the +current smallest and largest components of the vector. +.CS +# Print the bounds of the vector +puts "min=$y(min) max=$y(max)" +.CE +To delete components from a vector, simply unset the corresponding +array element. In the following example, the first component of +\f(CWy\fR is deleted. All the remaining components of \f(CWy\fR will be +moved down by one index as the length of the vector is reduced by +one. +.CS +# Delete the first component +unset y(0) +puts "new first element is $y(0)" +.CE +The vector's Tcl command can also be used to query or set the vector. +.CS +# Create and set the components of a new vector +blt::vector create x +x set { 0.02 0.04 0.06 0.08 0.10 0.12 0.14 0.16 0.18 0.20 } +.CE +Here we've created a vector \f(CWx\fR without a initial length specification. +In this case, the length is zero. The \fBset\fR operation resets the vector, +extending it and setting values for each new component. +.PP +There are several operations for vectors. The \fBrange\fR operation +lists the components of a vector between two indices. +.CS +# List the components +puts "x = [x range 0 end]" +.CE +You can search for a particular value using the \fBsearch\fR +operation. It returns a list of indices of the components with the +same value. If no component has the same value, it returns \f(CW""\fR. +.CS +# Find the index of the biggest component +set indices [x search $x(max)] +.CE +Other operations copy, append, or sort vectors. You can append +vectors or new values onto an existing vector with the \fBappend\fR +operation. +.CS +# Append assorted vectors and values to x +x append x2 x3 { 2.3 4.5 } x4 +.CE +The \fBsort\fR operation sorts the vector. If any additional vectors +are specified, they are rearranged in the same order as the vector. +For example, you could use it to sort data points represented by x and +y vectors. +.CS +# Sort the data points +x sort y +.CE +The vector \f(CWx\fR is sorted while the components of \f(CWy\fR are +rearranged so that the original x,y coordinate pairs are retained. +.PP +The \fBexpr\fR operation lets you perform arithmetic on vectors. +The result is stored in the vector. +.CS +# Add the two vectors and a scalar +x expr { x + y } +x expr { x * 2 } +.CE +When a vector is modified, resized, or deleted, it may trigger +call-backs to notify the clients of the vector. For example, when a +vector used in the \fBgraph\fR widget is updated, the vector +automatically notifies the widget that it has changed. The graph can +then redrawn itself at the next idle point. By default, the +notification occurs when Tk is next idle. This way you can modify the +vector many times without incurring the penalty of the graph redrawing +itself for each change. You can change this behavior using the +\fBnotify\fR operation. +.CS +# Make vector x notify after every change +x notify always + ... +# Never notify +x notify never + ... +# Force notification now +x notify now +.CE +To delete a vector, use the \fBvector delete\fR command. +Both the vector and its corresponding Tcl command are destroyed. +.CS +# Remove vector x +blt::vector destroy x +.CE +.SH SYNTAX +Vectors are created using the \fBvector create\fR operation. +Th \fBcreate\fR operation can be invoked in one of three forms: +.TP +\fBblt::vector create \fIvecName\fR +This creates a new vector \fIvecName\fR which initially has no components. +.TP +\fBblt::vector create \fIvecName\fR(\fIsize\fR) +This second form creates a new vector which will contain \fIsize\fR +number of components. The components will be indexed starting from +zero (0). The default value for the components is \f(CW0.0\fR. +.TP +\fBblt::vector create \fIvecName\fR(\fIfirst\fR:\fIlast\fR) +The last form creates a new vector of indexed \fIfirst\fR through +\fIlast\fR. \fIFirst\fR and \fIlast\fR can be any integer value +so long as \fIfirst\fR is less than \fIlast\fR. +.PP +Vector names must start with a letter and consist of letters, digits, +or underscores. +.CS +# Error: must start with letter +blt::vector create 1abc +.CE +You can automatically generate vector names using the +"\f(CW#auto\fR" vector name. The \fBcreate\fR operation will generate a +unique vector name. +.CS +set vec [blt::vector create #auto] +puts "$vec has [$vec length] components" +.CE +.SS VECTOR INDICES +Vectors are indexed by integers. You can access the individual vector +components via its array variable or Tcl command. The string +representing the index can be an integer, a numeric expression, a +range, or a special keyword. +.PP +The index must lie within the current range of the vector, otherwise +an an error message is returned. Normally the indices of a vector +are start from 0. But you can use the \fBoffset\fR operation to +change a vector's indices on-the-fly. +.CS +puts $vecName(0) +vecName offset -5 +puts $vecName(-5) +.CE +You can also use numeric expressions as indices. The result +of the expression must be an integer value. +.CS +set n 21 +set vecName($n+3) 50.2 +.CE +The following special non-numeric indices are available: \f(CWmin\fR, \f(CWmax\fR, \f(CWend\fR, and +\f(CW++end\fR. +.CS +puts "min = $vecName($min)" +set vecName(end) -1.2 +.CE +The indices \f(CWmin\fR and \f(CWmax\fR will return the minimum and maximum +values of the vector. The index \f(CWend\fR returns the value of the +last component in the vector. The index \f(CW++end\fR is used to append +new value onto the vector. It automatically extends the vector by +one component and sets its value. +.CS +# Append an new component to the end +set vecName(++end) 3.2 +.CE +A range of indices can be indicated by a colon (:). +.CS +# Set the first six components to 1.0 +set vecName(0:5) 1.0 +.CE +If no index is supplied the first or last component is assumed. +.CS +# Print the values of all the components +puts $vecName(:) +.CE +.SH VECTOR OPERATIONS +.TP +\fBblt::vector create \fIvecName\fR?(\fIsize\fR)?... \fR?\fIswitches\fR? +The \fBcreate\fR operation creates a new vector \fIvecName\fR. Both a +Tcl command and array variable \fIvecName\fR are also created. The +name \fIvecName\fR must be unique, so another Tcl command or array +variable can not already exist in that scope. You can access the +components of the vector using its variable. If you change a value in +the array, or unset an array element, the vector is updated to reflect +the changes. When the variable \fIvecName\fR is unset, the vector and +its Tcl command are also destroyed. +.sp +The vector has optional switches that affect how the vector is created. They +are as follows: +.RS +.TP +\fB\-variable \fIvarName\fR +Specifies the name of a Tcl variable to be mapped to the vector. If +the variable already exists, it is first deleted, then recreated. +If \fIvarName\fR is the empty string, then no variable will be mapped. +You can always map a variable back to the vector using the vector's +\fBvariable\fR operation. +.TP +\fB\-command \fIcmdName\fR +Maps a Tcl command to the vector. The vector can be accessed using +\fIcmdName\fR and one of the vector instance operations. +A Tcl command by that name cannot already exist. +If \fIcmdName\fR is the empty string, no command mapping +will be made. +.TP +\fB\-watchunset \fIboolean\fR +Indicates that the vector should automatically delete itself if +the variable associated with the vector is unset. By default, +the vector will not be deleted. This is different from previous +releases. Set \fIboolean\fR to "true" to get the old behavior. +.RE +.TP +\fBblt::vector destroy \fIvecName\fR \fR?\fIvecName...\fR? +Deletes one or more vectors. Both the Tcl command and array variable +are removed also. +.TP +\fBblt::vector expr \fIexpression\fR +.RS +All binary operators take vectors as operands (remember that numbers +are treated as one-component vectors). The exact action of binary +operators depends upon the length of the second operand. If the +second operand has only one component, then each element of the first +vector operand is computed by that value. For example, the expression +"x * 2" multiples all elements of the vector x by 2. If the second +operand has more than one component, both operands must be the same +length. Each pair of corresponding elements are computed. So "x + y" +adds the the first components of x and y together, the second, and so on. +.sp +The valid operators are listed below, grouped in decreasing order +of precedence: +.TP 20 +\fB\-\0\0!\fR +Unary minus and logical NOT. The unary minus flips the sign of each +component in the vector. The logical not operator returns a vector of +whose values are 0.0 or 1.0. For each non-zero component 1.0 is returned, +0.0 otherwise. +.TP 20 +\fB^\fR +Exponentiation. +.TP 20 +\fB*\0\0/\0\0%\fR +Multiply, divide, remainder. +.TP 20 +\fB+\0\0\-\fR +Add and subtract. +.TP 20 +\fB<<\0\0>>\fR +Left and right shift. Circularly shifts the values of the vector +(not implemented yet). +.TP 20 +\fB<\0\0>\0\0<=\0\0>=\fR +Boolean less, greater, less than or equal, and greater than or equal. +Each operator returns a vector of ones and zeros. If the condition is true, +1.0 is the component value, 0.0 otherwise. +.TP 20 +\fB==\0\0!=\fR +Boolean equal and not equal. +Each operator returns a vector of ones and zeros. If the condition is true, +1.0 is the component value, 0.0 otherwise. +.TP 20 +\fB|\fR +Bit-wise OR. (Not implemented). +.TP 20 +\fB&&\fR +Logical AND. Produces a 1 result if both operands are non-zero, 0 otherwise. +.TP 20 +\fB||\fR +Logical OR. Produces a 0 result if both operands are zero, 1 otherwise. +.TP 20 +\fIx\fB?\fIy\fB:\fIz\fR +If-then-else, as in C. (Not implemented yet). +.LP +See the C manual for more details on the results produced by each +operator. All of the binary operators group left-to-right within the +same precedence level. +.sp +Several mathematical functions are supported for vectors. Each of +the following functions invokes the math library function of the same name; +see the manual entries for the library functions for details on what +they do. The operation is applied to all elements of the vector +returning the results. +.CS +.ta 2c 4c 6c +\fBacos\fR \fBcos\fR \fBhypot\fR \fBsinh\fR +\fBasin\fR \fBcosh\fR \fBlog\fR \fBsqrt\fR +\fBatan\fR \fBexp\fR \fBlog10\fR \fBtan\fR +\fBceil\fR \fBfloor\fR \fBsin\fR \fBtanh\fR +.sp +.CE +Additional functions are: +.TP 1i +\fBabs\fR +Returns the absolute value of each component. +.TP 1i +\fBrandom\fR +Returns a vector of non-negative values uniformly distributed +between [0.0, 1.0) using \fIdrand48\fR. +The seed comes from the internal clock of the machine or may be +set manual with the srandom function. +.TP 1i +\fBround\fR +Rounds each component of the vector. +.TP 1i +\fBsrandom\fR +Initializes the random number generator using \fIsrand48\fR. +The high order 32-bits are set using the integral portion of the first +vector component. All other components are ignored. The low order 16-bits +are set to an arbitrary value. +.PP +The following functions return a single value. +.TP 1i +\fBadev\fR +Returns the average deviation (defined as the sum of the absolute values +of the differences between component and the mean, divided by the length +of the vector). +.TP 1i +\fBkurtosis\fR +Returns the degree of peakedness (fourth moment) of the vector. +.TP 1i +\fBlength\fR +Returns the number of components in the vector. +.TP 1i +\fBmax\fR +Returns the vector's maximum value. +.TP 1i +\fBmean\fR +Returns the mean value of the vector. +.TP 1i +\fBmedian\fR +Returns the median of the vector. +.TP 1i +\fBmin\fR +Returns the vector's minimum value. +.TP 1i +\fBq1\fR +Returns the first quartile of the vector. +.TP 1i +\fBq3\fR +Returns the third quartile of the vector. +.TP 1i +\fBprod\fR +Returns the product of the components. +.TP 1i +\fBsdev\fR +Returns the standard deviation (defined as the square root of the variance) +of the vector. +.TP 1i +\fBskew\fR +Returns the skewness (or third moment) of the vector. This characterizes +the degree of asymmetry of the vector about the mean. +.TP 1i +\fBsum\fR +Returns the sum of the components. +.TP 1i +\fBvar\fR +Returns the variance of the vector. The sum of the squared differences +between each component and the mean is computed. The variance is +the sum divided by the length of the vector minus 1. +.PP +The last set returns a vector of the same length as the argument. +.TP 1i +\fBnorm\fR +Scales the values of the vector to lie in the range [0.0..1.0]. +.TP 1i +\fBsort\fR +Returns the vector components sorted in ascending order. +.RE +.TP +\fBvector names \fR?\fIpattern\fR? +.SH INSTANCE OPERATIONS +You can also use the vector's Tcl command to query or modify it. The +general form is +.DS +\fIvecName \fIoperation\fR \fR?\fIarg\fR?... +.DE +Both \fIoperation\fR and its arguments determine the exact behavior of +the command. The operations available for vectors are listed below. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBappend\fR \fIitem\fR ?\fIitem\fR?... +Appends the component values from \fIitem\fR to \fIvecName\fR. +\fIItem\fR can be either the name of a vector or a list of numeric +values. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBbinread\fR \fIchannel\fR ?\fIlength\fR? ?\fIswitches\fR? +Reads binary values from a Tcl channel. Values are either appended +to the end of the vector or placed at a given index (using the +\fB\-at\fR option), overwriting existing values. Data is read until EOF +is found on the channel or a specified number of values \fIlength\fR +are read (note that this is not necessarily the same as the number of +bytes). The following switches are supported: +.RS +.TP +\fB\-swap\fR +Swap bytes and words. The default endian is the host machine. +.TP +\fB\-at \fIindex\fR +New values will start at vector index \fIindex\fR. This will +overwrite any current values. +.TP +\fB\-format\fR \fIformat\fR +Specifies the format of the data. \fIFormat\fR can be one of the +following: "i1", "i2", "i4", "i8", "u1, "u2", "u4", "u8", "r4", +"r8", or "r16". The number indicates the number of bytes +required for each value. The letter indicates the type: "i" for signed, +"u" for unsigned, "r" or real. The default format is "r16". +.RE +.TP +\fIvecName \fBclear\fR +Clears the element indices from the array variable associated with +\fIvecName\fR. This doesn't affect the components of the vector. By +default, the number of entries in the Tcl array doesn't match the +number of components in the vector. This is because its too expensive +to maintain decimal strings for both the index and value for each +component. Instead, the index and value are saved only when you read +or write an element with a new index. This command removes the index +and value strings from the array. This is useful when the vector is +large. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBdelete\fR \fIindex\fR ?\fIindex\fR?... +Deletes the \fIindex\fRth component from the vector \fIvecName\fR. +\fIIndex\fR is the index of the element to be deleted. This is the +same as unsetting the array variable element \fIindex\fR. The vector +is compacted after all the indices have been deleted. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBdup\fR \fIdestName\fR +Copies \fIvecName\fR to \fIdestName\fR. \fIDestName\fR is the name of a +destination vector. If a vector \fIdestName\fR already exists, it is +overwritten with the components of \fIvecName\fR. Otherwise a +new vector is created. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBexpr\fR \fIexpression\fR +Computes the expression and resets the values of the vector accordingly. +Both scalar and vector math operations are allowed. All values in +expressions are either real numbers or names of vectors. All numbers +are treated as one component vectors. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBlength\fR ?\fInewSize\fR? +Queries or resets the number of components in \fIvecName\fR. +\fINewSize\fR is a number specifying the new size of the vector. If +\fInewSize\fR is smaller than the current size of \fIvecName\fR, +\fIvecName\fR is truncated. If \fInewSize\fR is greater, the vector +is extended and the new components are initialized to \f(CW0.0\fR. If +no \fInewSize\fR argument is present, the current length of the vector +is returned. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBmerge\fR \fIsrcName\fR ?\fIsrcName\fR?... +Merges the named vectors into a single vector. The resulting +vector is formed by merging the components of each source vector +one index at a time. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBnotify\fR \fIkeyword\fR +Controls how vector clients are notified of changes to the vector. +The exact behavior is determined by \fIkeyword\fR. +.RS +.TP 0.75i +\f(CWalways\fR +Indicates that clients are to be notified immediately whenever the +vector is updated. +.TP +\f(CWnever\fR +Indicates that no clients are to be notified. +.TP +\f(CWwhenidle\fR +Indicates that clients are to be notified at the next idle point +whenever the vector is updated. +.TP +\f(CWnow\fR +If any client notifications is currently pending, they are notified +immediately. +.TP +\f(CWcancel\fR +Cancels pending notifications of clients using the vector. +.TP +\f(CWpending\fR +Returns \f(CW1\fR if a client notification is pending, and \f(CW0\fR otherwise. +.RE +.TP +\fIvecName \fBoffset\fR ?\fIvalue\fR? +Shifts the indices of the vector by the amount specified by \fIvalue\fR. +\fIValue\fR is an integer number. If no \fIvalue\fR argument is +given, the current offset is returned. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBpopulate\fR \fIdestName\fR ?\fIdensity\fR? +Creates a vector \fIdestName\fR which is a superset of \fIvecName\fR. +\fIDestName\fR will include all the components of \fIvecName\fR, in +addition the interval between each of the original components will +contain a \fIdensity\fR number of new components, whose values are +evenly distributed between the original components values. This is +useful for generating abscissas to be interpolated along a spline. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBrange\fR \fIfirstIndex\fR ?\fIlastIndex\fR?... +Returns a list of numeric values representing the vector components +between two indices. Both \fIfirstIndex\fR and \fIlastIndex\fR are +indices representing the range of components to be returned. If +\fIlastIndex\fR is less than \fIfirstIndex\fR, the components are +listed in reverse order. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBsearch\fR \fIvalue\fR ?\fIvalue\fR? +Searches for a value or range of values among the components of +\fIvecName\fR. If one \fIvalue\fR argument is given, a list of +indices of the components which equal \fIvalue\fR is returned. If a +second \fIvalue\fR is also provided, then the indices of all +components which lie within the range of the two values are returned. +If no components are found, then \f(CW""\fR is returned. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBset\fR \fIitem\fR +Resets the components of the vector to \fIitem\fR. \fIItem\fR can +be either a list of numeric expressions or another vector. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBseq\fR \fIstart\fR ?\fIfinish\fR? ?\fIstep\fR? +Generates a sequence of values starting with the value \fIstart\fR. +\fIFinish\fR indicates the terminating value of the sequence. +The vector is automatically resized to contain just the sequence. +If three arguments are present, \fIstep\fR designates the interval. +.sp +With only two arguments (no \fIfinish\fR argument), the sequence will +continue until the vector is filled. With one argument, the interval +defaults to 1.0. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBsort\fR ?\fB-reverse\fR? ?\fIargName\fR?... +Sorts the vector \fIvecName\fR in increasing order. If the +\fB-reverse\fR flag is present, the vector is sorted in decreasing +order. If other arguments \fIargName\fR are present, they are the +names of vectors which will be rearranged in the same manner as +\fIvecName\fR. Each vector must be the same length as \fIvecName\fR. +You could use this to sort the x vector of a graph, while still +retaining the same x,y coordinate pairs in a y vector. +.TP +\fIvecName \fBvariable\fR \fIvarName\fR +Maps a Tcl variable to the vector, creating another means for +accessing the vector. The variable \fIvarName\fR can't already +exist. This overrides any current variable mapping the vector +may have. +.RE +.SH C LANGUAGE API +You can create, modify, and destroy vectors from C code, using +library routines. +You need to include the header file \f(CWblt.h\fR. It contains the +definition of the structure \fBBlt_Vector\fR, which represents the +vector. It appears below. +.CS +\fRtypedef struct { + double *\fIvalueArr\fR; + int \fInumValues\fR; + int \fIarraySize\fR; + double \fImin\fR, \fImax\fR; +} \fBBlt_Vector\fR; +.CE +The field \fIvalueArr\fR points to memory holding the vector +components. The components are stored in a double precision array, +whose size size is represented by \fIarraySize\fR. \fINumValues\fR is +the length of vector. The size of the array is always equal to or +larger than the length of the vector. \fIMin\fR and \fImax\fR are +minimum and maximum component values. +.SH LIBRARY ROUTINES +The following routines are available from C to manage vectors. +Vectors are identified by the vector name. +.PP +\fBBlt_CreateVector\fR +.RS .25i +.TP 1i +Synopsis: +.CS +int \fBBlt_CreateVector\fR (\fIinterp\fR, \fIvecName\fR, \fIlength\fR, \fIvecPtrPtr\fR) +.RS 1.25i +Tcl_Interp *\fIinterp\fR; +char *\fIvecName\fR; +int \fIlength\fR; +Blt_Vector **\fIvecPtrPtr\fR; +.RE +.CE +.TP +Description: +Creates a new vector \fIvecName\fR\fR with a length of \fIlength\fR. +\fBBlt_CreateVector\fR creates both a new Tcl command and array +variable \fIvecName\fR. Neither a command nor variable named +\fIvecName\fR can already exist. A pointer to the vector is +placed into \fIvecPtrPtr\fR. +.TP +Results: +Returns \f(CWTCL_OK\fR if the vector is successfully created. If +\fIlength\fR is negative, a Tcl variable or command \fIvecName\fR +already exists, or memory cannot be allocated for the vector, then +\f(CWTCL_ERROR\fR is returned and \fIinterp->result\fR will contain an +error message. +.RE +.sp +.PP +\fBBlt_DeleteVectorByName\fR +.RS .25i +.TP 1i +Synopsis: +.CS +int \fBBlt_DeleteVectorByName\fR (\fIinterp\fR, \fIvecName\fR) +.RS 1.25i +Tcl_Interp *\fIinterp\fR; +char *\fIvecName\fR; +.RE +.CE +.TP 1i +Description: +Removes the vector \fIvecName\fR. \fIVecName\fR is the name of a vector +which must already exist. Both the Tcl command and array variable +\fIvecName\fR are destroyed. All clients of the vector will be notified +immediately that the vector has been destroyed. +.TP +Results: +Returns \f(CWTCL_OK\fR if the vector is successfully deleted. If +\fIvecName\fR is not the name a vector, then \f(CWTCL_ERROR\fR is returned +and \fIinterp->result\fR will contain an error message. +.RE +.sp +.PP +\fBBlt_DeleteVector\fR +.RS .25i +.TP 1i +Synopsis: +.CS +int \fBBlt_DeleteVector\fR (\fIvecPtr\fR) +.RS 1.25i +Blt_Vector *\fIvecPtr\fR; +.RE +.CE +.TP 1i +Description: +Removes the vector pointed to by \fIvecPtr\fR. \fIVecPtr\fR is a +pointer to a vector, typically set by \fBBlt_GetVector\fR or +\fBBlt_CreateVector\fR. Both the Tcl command and array variable of +the vector are destroyed. All clients of the vector will be notified +immediately that the vector has been destroyed. +.TP +Results: +Returns \f(CWTCL_OK\fR if the vector is successfully deleted. If +\fIvecName\fR is not the name a vector, then \f(CWTCL_ERROR\fR is returned +and \fIinterp->result\fR will contain an error message. +.RE +.sp +.PP +\fBBlt_GetVector\fR +.RS .25i +.TP 1i +Synopsis: +.CS +int \fBBlt_GetVector\fR (\fIinterp\fR, \fIvecName\fR, \fIvecPtrPtr\fR) +.RS 1.25i +Tcl_Interp *\fIinterp\fR; +char *\fIvecName\fR; +Blt_Vector **\fIvecPtrPtr\fR; +.RE +.CE +.TP 1i +Description: +Retrieves the vector \fIvecName\fR. \fIVecName\fR is the name of a +vector which must already exist. \fIVecPtrPtr\fR will point be set to +the address of the vector. +.TP +Results: +Returns \f(CWTCL_OK\fR if the vector is successfully retrieved. If +\fIvecName\fR is not the name of a vector, then \f(CWTCL_ERROR\fR is +returned and \fIinterp->result\fR will contain an error message. +.RE +.sp +.PP +\fBBlt_ResetVector\fR +.PP +.RS .25i +.TP 1i +Synopsis: +.CS +int \fBBlt_ResetVector\fR (\fIvecPtr\fR, \fIdataArr\fR, + \fInumValues\fR, \fIarraySize\fR, \fIfreeProc\fR) +.RS 1.25i +Blt_Vector *\fIvecPtr\fR; +double *\fIdataArr\fR; +int *\fInumValues\fR; +int *\fIarraySize\fR; +Tcl_FreeProc *\fIfreeProc\fR; +.RE +.CE +.TP +Description: +Resets the components of the vector pointed to by \fIvecPtr\fR. +Calling \fBBlt_ResetVector\fR will trigger the vector to dispatch +notifications to its clients. \fIDataArr\fR is the array of doubles +which represents the vector data. \fINumValues\fR is the number of +elements in the array. \fIArraySize\fR is the actual size of the array +(the array may be bigger than the number of values stored in +it). \fIFreeProc\fP indicates how the storage for the vector component +array (\fIdataArr\fR) was allocated. It is used to determine how to +reallocate memory when the vector is resized or destroyed. It must be +\f(CWTCL_DYNAMIC\fR, \f(CWTCL_STATIC\fR, \f(CWTCL_VOLATILE\fR, or a pointer +to a function to free the memory allocated for the vector array. If +\fIfreeProc\fR is \f(CWTCL_VOLATILE\fR, it indicates that \fIdataArr\fR +must be copied and saved. If \fIfreeProc\fR is \f(CWTCL_DYNAMIC\fR, it +indicates that \fIdataArr\fR was dynamically allocated and that Tcl +should free \fIdataArr\fR if necessary. \f(CWStatic\fR indicates that +nothing should be done to release storage for \fIdataArr\fR. +.TP +Results: +Returns \f(CWTCL_OK\fR if the vector is successfully resized. If +\fInewSize\fR is negative, a vector \fIvecName\fR does not exist, or +memory cannot be allocated for the vector, then \f(CWTCL_ERROR\fR is +returned and \fIinterp->result\fR will contain an error message. +.RE +.sp +.PP +\fBBlt_ResizeVector\fR +.RS .25i +.TP 1i +Synopsis: +.CS +int \fBBlt_ResizeVector\fR (\fIvecPtr\fR, \fInewSize\fR) +.RS 1.25i +Blt_Vector *\fIvecPtr\fR; +int \fInewSize\fR; +.RE +.CE +.TP +Description: +Resets the length of the vector pointed to by \fIvecPtr\fR to +\fInewSize\fR. If \fInewSize\fR is smaller than the current size of +the vector, it is truncated. If \fInewSize\fR is greater, the vector +is extended and the new components are initialized to \f(CW0.0\fR. +Calling \fBBlt_ResetVector\fR will trigger the vector to dispatch +notifications. +.TP +Results: +Returns \f(CWTCL_OK\fR if the vector is successfully resized. If +\fInewSize\fR is negative or memory can not be allocated for the vector, +then \f(CWTCL_ERROR\fR is returned and \fIinterp->result\fR will contain +an error message. +.sp +.PP +\fBBlt_VectorExists\fR +.RS .25i +.TP 1i +Synopsis: +.CS +int \fBBlt_VectorExists\fR (\fIinterp\fR, \fIvecName\fR) +.RS 1.25i +Tcl_Interp *\fIinterp\fR; +char *\fIvecName\fR; +.RE +.CE +.TP +Description: +Indicates if a vector named \fIvecName\fR exists in \fIinterp\fR. +.TP +Results: +Returns \f(CW1\fR if a vector \fIvecName\fR exists and \f(CW0\fR otherwise. +.RE +.sp +.PP +If your application needs to be notified when a vector changes, it can +allocate a unique \fIclient identifier\fR for itself. Using this +identifier, you can then register a call-back to be made whenever the +vector is updated or destroyed. By default, the call-backs are made at +the next idle point. This can be changed to occur at the time the +vector is modified. An application can allocate more than one +identifier for any vector. When the client application is done with +the vector, it should free the identifier. +.PP +The call-back routine must of the following type. +.CS +.RS +.sp +typedef void (\fBBlt_VectorChangedProc\fR) (Tcl_Interp *\fIinterp\fR, +.RS .25i +ClientData \fIclientData\fR, Blt_VectorNotify \fInotify\fR); +.RE +.sp +.RE +.CE +.fi +\fIClientData\fR is passed to this routine whenever it is called. You +can use this to pass information to the call-back. The \fInotify\fR +argument indicates whether the vector has been updated of destroyed. It +is an enumerated type. +.CS +.RS +.sp +typedef enum { + \f(CWBLT_VECTOR_NOTIFY_UPDATE\fR=1, + \f(CWBLT_VECTOR_NOTIFY_DESTROY\fR=2 +} \fBBlt_VectorNotify\fR; +.sp +.RE +.CE +.PP +\fBBlt_AllocVectorId\fR +.RS .25i +.TP 1i +Synopsis: +.CS +Blt_VectorId \fBBlt_AllocVectorId\fR (\fIinterp\fR, \fIvecName\fR) +.RS 1.25i +Tcl_Interp *\fIinterp\fR; +char *\fIvecName\fR; +.RE +.CE +.TP +Description: +Allocates an client identifier for with the vector \fIvecName\fR. +This identifier can be used to specify a call-back which is triggered +when the vector is updated or destroyed. +.TP +Results: +Returns a client identifier if successful. If \fIvecName\fR is not +the name of a vector, then \f(CWNULL\fR is returned and +\fIinterp->result\fR will contain an error message. +.RE +.sp +.PP +\fBBlt_GetVectorById\fR +.RS .25i +.TP 1i +Synopsis: +.CS +int \fBBlt_GetVector\fR (\fIinterp\fR, \fIclientId\fR, \fIvecPtrPtr\fR) +.RS 1.25i +Tcl_Interp *\fIinterp\fR; +Blt_VectorId \fIclientId\fR; +Blt_Vector **\fIvecPtrPtr\fR; +.RE +.CE +.TP 1i +Description: +Retrieves the vector used by \fIclientId\fR. \fIClientId\fR is a valid +vector client identifier allocated by \fBBlt_AllocVectorId\fR. +\fIVecPtrPtr\fR will point be set to the address of the vector. +.TP +Results: +Returns \f(CWTCL_OK\fR if the vector is successfully retrieved. +.RE +.sp +.PP +\fBBlt_SetVectorChangedProc\fR +.RS .25i +.TP 1i +Synopsis: +.CS +void \fBBlt_SetVectorChangedProc\fR (\fIclientId\fR, \fIproc\fR, \fIclientData\fR); +.RS 1.25i +Blt_VectorId \fIclientId\fR; +Blt_VectorChangedProc *\fIproc\fR; +ClientData *\fIclientData\fR; +.RE +.CE +.TP +Description: +Specifies a call-back routine to be called whenever the vector +associated with \fIclientId\fR is updated or deleted. \fIProc\fR is a +pointer to call-back routine and must be of the type +\fBBlt_VectorChangedProc\fR. \fIClientData\fR is a one-word value to +be passed to the routine when it is invoked. If \fIproc\fR is +\f(CWNULL\fR, then the client is not notified. +.TP +Results: +The designated call-back procedure will be invoked when the vector is +updated or destroyed. +.RE +.sp +.PP +\fBBlt_FreeVectorId\fR +.RS .25i +.TP 1i +Synopsis: +.CS +void \fBBlt_FreeVectorId\fR (\fIclientId\fR); +.RS 1.25i +Blt_VectorId \fIclientId\fR; +.RE +.CE +.TP +Description: +Frees the client identifier. Memory allocated for the identifier +is released. The client will no longer be notified when the +vector is modified. +.TP +Results: +The designated call-back procedure will be no longer be invoked when +the vector is updated or destroyed. +.RE +.sp +.PP +\fBBlt_NameOfVectorId\fR +.RS .25i +.TP 1i +Synopsis: +.CS +char *\fBBlt_NameOfVectorId\fR (\fIclientId\fR); +.RS 1.25i +Blt_VectorId \fIclientId\fR; +.RE +.CE +.TP +Description: +Retrieves the name of the vector associated with the client identifier +\fIclientId\fR. +.TP +Results: +Returns the name of the vector associated with \fIclientId\fR. If +\fIclientId\fR is not an identifier or the vector has been destroyed, +\f(CWNULL\fR is returned. +.RE +.sp +.PP +\fBBlt_InstallIndexProc\fR +.RS .25i +.TP 1i +Synopsis: +.CS +void \fBBlt_InstallIndexProc\fR (\fIindexName\fR, \fIprocPtr\fR) +.RS 1.25i +char *\fIindexName\fR; +Blt_VectorIndexProc *\fIprocPtr\fR; +.RE +.CE +.TP +Description: +Registers a function to be called to retrieved the index \fIindexName\fR +from the vector's array variable. +.sp +typedef double Blt_VectorIndexProc(Vector *vecPtr); +.sp +The function will be passed a pointer to the vector. The function must +return a double representing the value at the index. +.TP +Results: +The new index is installed into the vector. +.RE +.RE +.SH C API EXAMPLE +The following example opens a file of binary data and stores it in an +array of doubles. The array size is computed from the size of the +file. If the vector "data" exists, calling \fBBlt_VectorExists\fR, +\fBBlt_GetVector\fR is called to get the pointer to the vector. +Otherwise the routine \fBBlt_CreateVector\fR is called to create a new +vector and returns a pointer to it. Just like the Tcl interface, both +a new Tcl command and array variable are created when a new vector is +created. It doesn't make any difference what the initial size of the +vector is since it will be reset shortly. The vector is updated when +\fBlt_ResetVector\fR is called. Blt_ResetVector makes the changes +visible to the Tcl interface and other vector clients (such as a graph +widget). +.sp +.CS +#include <tcl.h> +#include <blt.h> +... +Blt_Vector *vecPtr; +double *newArr; +FILE *f; +struct stat statBuf; +int numBytes, numValues; + +f = fopen("binary.dat", "r"); +fstat(fileno(f), &statBuf); +numBytes = (int)statBuf.st_size; + +/* Allocate an array big enough to hold all the data */ +newArr = (double *)malloc(numBytes); +numValues = numBytes / sizeof(double); +fread((void *)newArr, numValues, sizeof(double), f); +fclose(f); + +if (Blt_VectorExists(interp, "data")) { + if (Blt_GetVector(interp, "data", &vecPtr) != TCL_OK) { + return TCL_ERROR; + } +} else { + if (Blt_CreateVector(interp, "data", 0, &vecPtr) != TCL_OK) { + return TCL_ERROR; + } +} +/* + * Reset the vector. Clients will be notified when Tk is idle. + * TCL_DYNAMIC tells the vector to free the memory allocated + * if it needs to reallocate or destroy the vector. + */ +if (Blt_ResetVector(vecPtr, newArr, numValues, numValues, + TCL_DYNAMIC) != TCL_OK) { + return TCL_ERROR; +} +.CE +.SH "INCOMPATIBILITIES" +In previous versions, if the array variable isn't global +(i.e. local to a Tcl procedure), the vector is automatically +destroyed when the procedure returns. +.CS +proc doit {} { + # Temporary vector x + vector x(10) + set x(9) 2.0 + ... +} +.CE +.PP +This has changed. Variables are not automatically destroyed when +their variable is unset. You can restore the old behavior by +setting the "-watchunset" switch. +.CE +.SH KEYWORDS +vector, graph, widget |