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The Apache Commons Math project is a library of lightweight, self-contained mathematics and statistics components addressing the most common practical problems not immediately available in the Java programming language or commons-lang.
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/*
* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
* contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
* this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
* The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
* (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
* the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
package org.apache.commons.math3.analysis.solvers;
import org.apache.commons.math3.analysis.UnivariateFunction;
import org.apache.commons.math3.exception.MathIllegalArgumentException;
import org.apache.commons.math3.exception.TooManyEvaluationsException;
/**
* Interface for (univariate real) rootfinding algorithms.
* Implementations will search for only one zero in the given interval.
*
* This class is not intended for use outside of the Apache Commons Math
* library, regular user should rely on more specific interfaces like
* {@link UnivariateSolver}, {@link PolynomialSolver} or {@link
* DifferentiableUnivariateSolver}.
* @param Type of function to solve.
*
* @since 3.0
* @see UnivariateSolver
* @see PolynomialSolver
* @see DifferentiableUnivariateSolver
*/
public interface BaseUnivariateSolver {
/**
* Get the maximum number of function evaluations.
*
* @return the maximum number of function evaluations.
*/
int getMaxEvaluations();
/**
* Get the number of evaluations of the objective function.
* The number of evaluations corresponds to the last call to the
* {@code optimize} method. It is 0 if the method has not been
* called yet.
*
* @return the number of evaluations of the objective function.
*/
int getEvaluations();
/**
* Get the absolute accuracy of the solver. Solutions returned by the
* solver should be accurate to this tolerance, i.e., if ε is the
* absolute accuracy of the solver and {@code v} is a value returned by
* one of the {@code solve} methods, then a root of the function should
* exist somewhere in the interval ({@code v} - ε, {@code v} + ε).
*
* @return the absolute accuracy.
*/
double getAbsoluteAccuracy();
/**
* Get the relative accuracy of the solver. The contract for relative
* accuracy is the same as {@link #getAbsoluteAccuracy()}, but using
* relative, rather than absolute error. If ρ is the relative accuracy
* configured for a solver and {@code v} is a value returned, then a root
* of the function should exist somewhere in the interval
* ({@code v} - ρ {@code v}, {@code v} + ρ {@code v}).
*
* @return the relative accuracy.
*/
double getRelativeAccuracy();
/**
* Get the function value accuracy of the solver. If {@code v} is
* a value returned by the solver for a function {@code f},
* then by contract, {@code |f(v)|} should be less than or equal to
* the function value accuracy configured for the solver.
*
* @return the function value accuracy.
*/
double getFunctionValueAccuracy();
/**
* Solve for a zero root in the given interval.
* A solver may require that the interval brackets a single zero root.
* Solvers that do require bracketing should be able to handle the case
* where one of the endpoints is itself a root.
*
* @param maxEval Maximum number of evaluations.
* @param f Function to solve.
* @param min Lower bound for the interval.
* @param max Upper bound for the interval.
* @return a value where the function is zero.
* @throws MathIllegalArgumentException
* if the arguments do not satisfy the requirements specified by the solver.
* @throws TooManyEvaluationsException if
* the allowed number of evaluations is exceeded.
*/
double solve(int maxEval, FUNC f, double min, double max)
throws MathIllegalArgumentException, TooManyEvaluationsException;
/**
* Solve for a zero in the given interval, start at {@code startValue}.
* A solver may require that the interval brackets a single zero root.
* Solvers that do require bracketing should be able to handle the case
* where one of the endpoints is itself a root.
*
* @param maxEval Maximum number of evaluations.
* @param f Function to solve.
* @param min Lower bound for the interval.
* @param max Upper bound for the interval.
* @param startValue Start value to use.
* @return a value where the function is zero.
* @throws MathIllegalArgumentException
* if the arguments do not satisfy the requirements specified by the solver.
* @throws TooManyEvaluationsException if
* the allowed number of evaluations is exceeded.
*/
double solve(int maxEval, FUNC f, double min, double max, double startValue)
throws MathIllegalArgumentException, TooManyEvaluationsException;
/**
* Solve for a zero in the vicinity of {@code startValue}.
*
* @param f Function to solve.
* @param startValue Start value to use.
* @return a value where the function is zero.
* @param maxEval Maximum number of evaluations.
* @throws org.apache.commons.math3.exception.MathIllegalArgumentException
* if the arguments do not satisfy the requirements specified by the solver.
* @throws org.apache.commons.math3.exception.TooManyEvaluationsException if
* the allowed number of evaluations is exceeded.
*/
double solve(int maxEval, FUNC f, double startValue);
}