%perlcode %{
@EXPORT_OK = qw/
gsl_spline_alloc
gsl_spline_init
gsl_spline_name
gsl_spline_min_size
gsl_spline_eval_e
gsl_spline_eval
gsl_spline_eval_deriv_e
gsl_spline_eval_deriv
gsl_spline_eval_deriv2_e
gsl_spline_eval_deriv2
gsl_spline_eval_integ_e
gsl_spline_eval_integ
gsl_spline_free
/;
%EXPORT_TAGS = ( all => [ @EXPORT_OK ] );
__END__
=head1 NAME
Math::GSL::Spline - Higher-level Interface to Interp
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use Math::GSL::Spline qw /:all/;
=head1 DESCRIPTION
The functions described in the Interp module required the user to supply pointers to the x and y arrays on each call. The following functions are equivalent to the corresponding gsl_interp functions but maintain a copy of this data in the gsl_spline object. This removes the need to pass both xa and ya as arguments on each evaluation.
Here is a list of all the functions in this module :
=over
=item * C<gsl_spline_alloc($T, $size)>
=item * C<gsl_spline_init($spline, $xa, $ya, $size)>
=item * C<gsl_spline_free($spline)>
=item * C<gsl_spline_name($spline)>
=item * C<gsl_spline_min_size($spline)>
=item * C<gsl_spline_eval_e($spline, $x, $acc)>
=item * C<gsl_spline_eval($spline, $x, $acc)>
=item * C<gsl_spline_eval_deriv_e($spline, $x, $acc)>
=item * C<gsl_spline_eval_deriv($spline, $x, $acc)>
=item * C<gsl_spline_eval_deriv2_e($spline, $x, $acc)>
=item * C<gsl_spline_eval_deriv2($spline, $x, $acc)>
=item * C<gsl_spline_eval_integ_e($spline, $a, $b, $acc)>
=item * C<gsl_spline_eval_integ($spline, $a, $b, $acc)>
=back
For more informations on the functions, we refer you to the GSL offcial
documentation: L<http://www.gnu.org/software/gsl/manual/html_node/>
Tip : search on google: site:http://www.gnu.org/software/gsl/manual/html_node/ name_of_the_function_you_want
=head1 AUTHORS
Jonathan Leto <jonathan@leto.net> and Thierry Moisan <thierry.moisan@gmail.com>
=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2008-2009 Jonathan Leto and Thierry Moisan
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.
=cut
%}