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GNU Octave From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
GNU Octave
Octave is a free computer program for performing numerical computations which is mostly compatible with MATLAB. It is part of the GNU Project.
Contents
1 History 2 Technical details 3 Octave, the language 4 Notable features 5 MATLAB compatibility 6 See also 7 External links 7.1 Documentation 7.2 Graphical User Interfaces 7.3 Web Interfaces 7.4 Add-ons 8 References
History The project was conceived around 1988. At first it was intended to be a companion to a chemical reactor design course. Real development was started by John W. Eaton in 1992. The first alpha release dates back to January 4, 1993 and on February 17, 1994 version 1.0 was released. Version 3.0 was released on December 21, 2007.
GNU Octave W. Eaton Developed John C++ Written by in 1988 Initial Platform Cross-platform release Available ? 3.0.3 (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php? Stable in title=Template:Latest_stable_software_release/GNU_Octave&action=edit) (October 10, release Scientific computing Type 2008) [+/− (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
License Preview Website release
GNU General Public License title=Template:Latest stable software release/GNU Octave&action=edit&preload=Template:LSR/syntax)] 3.0.1 (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php? http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/ title=Template:Latest_preview_software_release/GNU_Octave&action=edit) (April 21,
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It should be noted that the name has nothing to do with musical octaves. Octave is named after a former professor of the principal author, who was known for his ability to perform quick back-of-an-envelope calculations. [1]
Technical details
Octave is written in C++ using STL libraries. Octave uses an interpreter to execute the Octave language. Octave is extensible using dynamically loadable modules. Octave interpreter works in tandem with gnuplot and Grace software to create plots, graphs, and charts, and to save or print them.
Octave, the language The Octave language is an interpreted programming language. It is a structured programming language (similar to C) and supports many common C standard library constructs, and can be extended to support UNIX system calls and functions. However, it does not support passing arguments by reference. Octave programs consist of a list of function calls or a script. The syntax is matrix-based and provides various functions for matrix operations. It is not object-oriented, but it does support various data structures. Its syntax is very similar to MATLAB, and carefully programming a script will allow it to run on both Octave and MATLAB. Because Octave is made available under the GNU General Public License, it may be freely copied and used. The program runs under most Unix and Unix-like operating systems, as well as Microsoft Windows.
Notable features Command and variable name completion
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Typing a TAB character on the command line causes Octave to attempt to complete variable, function, and file names (similar to bash's Tab completion). Octave uses the text before the cursor as the initial portion of the name to complete. Command history When running interactively, Octave saves the commands typed in an internal buffer so that they can be recalled and edited. Data structures Octave includes a limited amount of support for organizing data in structures. For instance: octave:1> x.a = 1; x.b = [1, 2; 3, 4]; x.c = "string"; octave:2> x.a x.a = 1 octave:3> x.b x.b = 1 3
2 4
octave:4> x.c x.c = string
Short-circuit boolean operators Octave's `&&' and `||' logical operators are evaluated in a short-circuit fashion (like the corresponding operators in the C language), in contrast to the element-by-element operators `&' and `|'. Increment and decrement operators Octave includes the C-like increment and decrement operators `++' and `--' in both their prefix and postfix forms. Unwind-protect Octave supports a limited form of exception handling modeled after the unwind-protect form of Lisp. The general form of an unwind_protect block looks like this:
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unwind_protect body unwind_protect_cleanup cleanup end_unwind_protect
Variable-length argument lists Octave has a real mechanism for handling functions that take an unspecified number of arguments without explicit upper limit. To specify a list of zero or more arguments, use the special argument varargin as the last (or only) argument in the list. function s = plus (varargin) if (nargin==0) s = 0; else s = varargin{1} + plus (varargin{2:nargin}); endif endfunction
Variable-length return lists A function can be set up to return any number of values by using the special return value varargout. For example: function varargout = multiassign (data) for k=1:nargout varargout{k} = data(:,k); endfor endfunction
C++ Integration It is also possible to execute Octave code directly in a C++ program. For example, here is a code snippet for calling rand([9000,1]): #include ... ColumnVector NumRands(2); NumRands(0) = 9000; NumRands(1) = 1; octave_value_list f_arg, f_ret;
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f_arg(0) = octave_value(NumRands); f_ret = feval("rand",f_arg,1); Matrix unis(f_ret(0).matrix_value());
MATLAB compatibility Octave has been built with MATLAB compatibility in mind. It therefore shares many features with MATLAB: 1. 2. 3. 4.
Matrices as fundamental data type. Built-in support for complex numbers. Powerful built-in math functions and extensive function libraries. Extensibility in the form of user-defined functions.
See also
List of numerical analysis software Comparison of numerical analysis software
Free software portal
External links
Octave.org (http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/) Home Page
Documentation
Online documentation (http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/docs.html) Octave wiki (http://wiki.octave.org/) (click twice—page redirects cause some browsers to time out) Octave FAQ Wiki with new plotting commands (http://www.aims.ac.za/wiki/index.php/Octave:Questions) Mailing List Archives on Nabble (http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/archive.html) - Search all Octave mailing lists. Mailing List Archives on Gmane (http://dir.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.octave.general) - Search all Octave mailing lists.
Graphical User Interfaces
QtOctave Graphical User Interface (http://qtoctave.wordpress.com/what-is-qtoctave/) - Matlab counterpart. Under heavy Development. Octave Workshop: an Octave IDE (http://www.unige.ch/math/folks/loisel/www.math.mcgill.ca/loisel/octave-workshop/) - Development stopped in 2006
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kOctave: Graphical User Interface (http://athlone.ath.cx/~matti/kde/koctave/) - for the KDE Desktop (base for Octave Workshop) Development stopped in 2003
Web Interfaces
Web Interface to Octave (http://hara.mimuw.edu.pl/weboctave) - Computing using GNU Octave in webbrowser Online access to Octave (http://www.online-utility.org/math/math_calculator.jsp) - Allows you to perform simple Octave calculation online.
Add-ons
Octave-forge community development page (http://octave.sourceforge.net/) - Toolboxes for various problems from independent developers. OctPlot (http://octplot.sourceforge.net/) - High quality 2D graphics. Octave graphics add-on (http://www.grafickenadstavbyoctave.wz.cz/) - 3D visualization system for Octave. Octaviz (http://octaviz.sourceforge.net/) - 3D visualization system for Octave. MPI Toolbox for Octave (MPITB) (http://atc.ugr.es/javier-bin/mpitb) - Parallel Computing for Octave using MPI.
References 1. ^ Eaton, John. "About Octave (http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/about.html)". Retrieved on 2008-10-14. Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Octave" Categories: GNU project | Data analysis software | GNU project software | Numerical programming languages | Free mathematics software | Free software programmed in C++ | Linux numerical analysis software | Array programming languages | Cross-platform software Hidden categories: Articles lacking in-text citations | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since November 2008 | Articles with unsourced statements since October 2008
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