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Livre :
Expressions régulières,
Syntaxe et mise en oeuvre :

ISBN : 978-2-7460-9712-4
EAN : 9782746097124
(Editions ENI)

GNU/Linux

CentOS 4.8

i386

dggrqf(l)


DGGRQF

DGGRQF

NAME
SYNOPSIS
PURPOSE
ARGUMENTS
FURTHER DETAILS

NAME

DGGRQF - compute a generalized RQ factorization of an M-by-N matrix A and a P-by-N matrix B

SYNOPSIS

SUBROUTINE DGGRQF(

M, P, N, A, LDA, TAUA, B, LDB, TAUB, WORK, LWORK, INFO )

INTEGER

INFO, LDA, LDB, LWORK, M, N, P

DOUBLE

PRECISION A( LDA, * ), B( LDB, * ), TAUA( * ), TAUB( * ), WORK( * )

PURPOSE

DGGRQF computes a generalized RQ factorization of an M-by-N matrix A and a P-by-N matrix B:
A = R*Q, B = Z*T*Q,

where Q is an N-by-N orthogonal matrix, Z is a P-by-P orthogonal matrix, and R and T assume one of the forms:

if M <= N, R = ( 0 R12 ) M, or if M > N, R = ( R11 ) M-N,
N-M M ( R21 ) N
N

where R12 or R21 is upper triangular, and

if P >= N, T = ( T11 ) N , or if P < N, T = ( T11 T12 ) P,
( 0 ) P-N P N-P
N

where T11 is upper triangular.

In particular, if B is square and nonsingular, the GRQ factorization of A and B implicitly gives the RQ factorization of A*inv(B):

A*inv(B) = (R*inv(T))*Z’

where inv(B) denotes the inverse of the matrix B, and Z’ denotes the transpose of the matrix Z.

ARGUMENTS

M (input) INTEGER

The number of rows of the matrix A. M >= 0.

P (input) INTEGER

The number of rows of the matrix B. P >= 0.

N (input) INTEGER

The number of columns of the matrices A and B. N >= 0.

A (input/output) DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (LDA,N)

On entry, the M-by-N matrix A. On exit, if M <= N, the upper triangle of the subarray A(1:M,N-M+1:N) contains the M-by-M upper triangular matrix R; if M > N, the elements on and above the (M-N)-th subdiagonal contain the M-by-N upper trapezoidal matrix R; the remaining elements, with the array TAUA, represent the orthogonal matrix Q as a product of elementary reflectors (see Further Details).

LDA (input) INTEGER

The leading dimension of the array A. LDA >= max(1,M).

TAUA (output) DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (min(M,N))

The scalar factors of the elementary reflectors which represent the orthogonal matrix Q (see Further Details). B (input/output) DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (LDB,N) On entry, the P-by-N matrix B. On exit, the elements on and above the diagonal of the array contain the min(P,N)-by-N upper trapezoidal matrix T (T is upper triangular if P >= N); the elements below the diagonal, with the array TAUB, represent the orthogonal matrix Z as a product of elementary reflectors (see Further Details). LDB (input) INTEGER The leading dimension of the array B. LDB >= max(1,P).

TAUB (output) DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (min(P,N))

The scalar factors of the elementary reflectors which represent the orthogonal matrix Z (see Further Details). WORK (workspace/output) DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (LWORK) On exit, if INFO = 0, WORK(1) returns the optimal LWORK.

LWORK (input) INTEGER

The dimension of the array WORK. LWORK >= max(1,N,M,P). For optimum performance LWORK >= max(N,M,P)*max(NB1,NB2,NB3), where NB1 is the optimal blocksize for the RQ factorization of an M-by-N matrix, NB2 is the optimal blocksize for the QR factorization of a P-by-N matrix, and NB3 is the optimal blocksize for a call of DORMRQ.

If LWORK = -1, then a workspace query is assumed; the routine only calculates the optimal size of the WORK array, returns this value as the first entry of the WORK array, and no error message related to LWORK is issued by XERBLA.

INFO (output) INTEGER

= 0: successful exit
< 0: if INF0= -i, the i-th argument had an illegal value.

FURTHER DETAILS

The matrix Q is represented as a product of elementary reflectors

Q = H(1) H(2) . . . H(k), where k = min(m,n).

Each H(i) has the form

H(i) = I - taua * v * v’

where taua is a real scalar, and v is a real vector with
v(n-k+i+1:n) = 0 and v(n-k+i) = 1; v(1:n-k+i-1) is stored on exit in A(m-k+i,1:n-k+i-1), and taua in TAUA(i).
To form Q explicitly, use LAPACK subroutine DORGRQ.
To use Q to update another matrix, use LAPACK subroutine DORMRQ.

The matrix Z is represented as a product of elementary reflectors

Z = H(1) H(2) . . . H(k), where k = min(p,n).

Each H(i) has the form

H(i) = I - taub * v * v’

where taub is a real scalar, and v is a real vector with
v(1:i-1) = 0 and v(i) = 1; v(i+1:p) is stored on exit in B(i+1:p,i), and taub in TAUB(i).
To form Z explicitly, use LAPACK subroutine DORGQR.
To use Z to update another matrix, use LAPACK subroutine DORMQR.



dggrqf(l)