Haskell library for univariate polynomials, backed by Vector
.
> (X + 1) + (X - 1) :: VPoly Integer
2 * X + 0
> (X + 1) * (X - 1) :: UPoly Int
1 * X^2 + 0 * X + (-1)
Poly v a
is polymorphic over a container v
, implementing Vector
interface, and coefficients of type a
. Usually v
is either a boxed vector from Data.Vector
or an unboxed vector from Data.Vector.Unboxed
. Use unboxed vectors whenever possible, e. g., when coefficients are Int
or Double
.
There are handy type synonyms:
type VPoly a = Poly Data.Vector.Vector a
type UPoly a = Poly Data.Vector.Unboxed.Vector a
The simplest way to construct a polynomial is using the pattern X
:
> X^2 - 3 * X + 2 :: UPoly Int
1 * X^2 + (-3) * X + 2
(Unfortunately, a type is often ambiguous and must be given explicitly.)
While being convenient to read and write in REPL, X
is relatively slow. The fastest approach is to use toPoly
, providing it with a vector of coefficients (head is the constant term):
> toPoly (Data.Vector.Unboxed.fromList [2, -3, 1 :: Int])
1 * X^2 + (-3) * X + 2
Alternatively one can enable {-# LANGUAGE OverloadedLists #-}
and simply write
> [2, -3, 1] :: UPoly Int
1 * X^2 + (-3) * X + 2
There is a shortcut to construct a monomial:
> monomial 2 3.5 :: UPoly Double
3.5 * X^2 + 0.0 * X + 0.0
Most operations are provided by means of instances, like Eq
and Num
. For example,
> (X^2 + 1) * (X^2 - 1) :: UPoly Int
1 * X^4 + 0 * X^3 + 0 * X^2 + 0 * X + (-1)
One can also find convenient to scale
by monomial (cf. monomial
above):
> scale 2 3.5 (X^2 + 1) :: UPoly Double
3.5 * X^4 + 0.0 * X^3 + 3.5 * X^2 + 0.0 * X + 0.0
While Poly
cannot be made an instance of Integral
(because there is no meaningful toInteger
),
it is an instance of GcdDomain
and Euclidean
from semirings
package. These type classes
cover main functionality of Integral
, providing division with remainder and gcd
/ lcm
:
> Data.Euclidean.gcd (X^2 + 7 * X + 6) (X^2 - 5 * X - 6) :: UPoly Int
1 * X + 1
> Data.Euclidean.quotRem (X^3 + 2) (X^2 - 1 :: UPoly Double)
(1.0 * X + 0.0,1.0 * X + 2.0)
Miscellaneous utilities include eval
for evaluation at a given value of indeterminate,
and reciprocals deriv
/ integral
:
> eval (X^2 + 1 :: UPoly Int) 3
10
> deriv (X^3 + 3 * X) :: UPoly Double
3.0 * X^2 + 0.0 * X + 3.0
> integral (3 * X^2 + 3) :: UPoly Double
1.0 * X^3 + 0.0 * X^2 + 3.0 * X + 0.0
Use unPoly
to deconstruct a polynomial to a vector of coefficients (head is the constant term):
> unPoly (X^2 - 3 * X + 2 :: UPoly Int)
[2,-3,1]
Further, leading
is a shortcut to obtain the leading term of a non-zero polynomial,
expressed as a power and a coefficient:
> leading (X^2 - 3 * X + 2 :: UPoly Double)
Just (2,1.0)
The same API is exposed in four flavours:
-
Data.Poly
provides dense polynomials withNum
-based interface. This is a default choice for most users. -
Data.Poly.Semiring
provides dense polynomials withSemiring
-based interface. -
Data.Poly.Sparse
provides sparse polynomials withNum
-based interface. Besides that, you may find it easier to use in REPL because of a more readableShow
instance, skipping zero coefficients. -
Data.Poly.Sparse.Semiring
provides sparse polynomials withSemiring
-based interface.
All flavours are available backed by boxed or unboxed vectors.
As a rough guide, poly
is at least 20x-40x faster than polynomial
library.
Multiplication is implemented via Karatsuba algorithm.
Here is a couple of benchmarks for UPoly Int
.
Benchmark | polynomial, μs | poly, μs | speedup |
---|---|---|---|
addition, 100 coeffs. | 45 | 2 | 22x |
addition, 1000 coeffs. | 441 | 17 | 25x |
addition, 10000 coeffs. | 6545 | 167 | 39x |
multiplication, 100 coeffs. | 1733 | 33 | 52x |
multiplication, 1000 coeffs. | 442000 | 1456 | 303x |