numpy.polyint
-
numpy.polyint(p, m=1, k=None)[source] -
Return an antiderivative (indefinite integral) of a polynomial.
Note
This forms part of the old polynomial API. Since version 1.4, the new polynomial API defined in
numpy.polynomialis preferred. A summary of the differences can be found in the transition guide.The returned order
mantiderivativePof polynomialpsatisfiesand is defined up to
m - 1integration constantsk. The constants determine the low-order polynomial partof
Pso that.
- Parameters
-
-
parray_like or poly1d -
Polynomial to integrate. A sequence is interpreted as polynomial coefficients, see
poly1d. -
mint, optional -
Order of the antiderivative. (Default: 1)
-
klist of m scalars or scalar, optional -
Integration constants. They are given in the order of integration: those corresponding to highest-order terms come first.
If
None(default), all constants are assumed to be zero. Ifm = 1, a single scalar can be given instead of a list.
-
See also
-
polyder -
derivative of a polynomial
-
poly1d.integ -
equivalent method
Examples
The defining property of the antiderivative:
>>> p = np.poly1d([1,1,1]) >>> P = np.polyint(p) >>> P poly1d([ 0.33333333, 0.5 , 1. , 0. ]) # may vary >>> np.polyder(P) == p True
The integration constants default to zero, but can be specified:
>>> P = np.polyint(p, 3) >>> P(0) 0.0 >>> np.polyder(P)(0) 0.0 >>> np.polyder(P, 2)(0) 0.0 >>> P = np.polyint(p, 3, k=[6,5,3]) >>> P poly1d([ 0.01666667, 0.04166667, 0.16666667, 3. , 5. , 3. ]) # may vary
Note that 3 = 6 / 2!, and that the constants are given in the order of integrations. Constant of the highest-order polynomial term comes first:
>>> np.polyder(P, 2)(0) 6.0 >>> np.polyder(P, 1)(0) 5.0 >>> P(0) 3.0
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https://numpy.org/doc/1.20/reference/generated/numpy.polyint.html