quadv
(Not recommended) Vectorized quadrature
quadv is not recommended. Use integral with the 'ArrayValued' option
instead.
Syntax
Q = quadv(fun,a,b)
Q = quadv(fun,a,b,tol)
Q = quadv(fun,a,b,tol,trace)
[Q,fcnt] = quadv(...)
Description
Q = quadv(fun,a,b) approximates the integral of the complex
array-valued function fun from a to
b to within an error of 1.e-6 using recursive
adaptive Simpson quadrature. fun is a function handle. The function
Y = fun(x) should accept a scalar argument
x and return an array result Y, whose
components are the integrands evaluated at x. Limits
a and b must be finite.
Parameterizing Functions explains how to
provide addition parameters to the function fun, if necessary.
Q = quadv(fun,a,b,tol) uses the absolute error tolerance
tol for all the integrals instead of the default, which is
1.e-6.
Note
The same tolerance is used for all components, so the results obtained with
quadv are usually not the same as those obtained with
quad on the individual components.
Q = quadv(fun,a,b,tol,trace) with non-zero
trace shows the values of [fcnt a b-a
Q(1)] during the recursion.
[Q,fcnt] = quadv(...) returns the number of function
evaluations.
The list below contains information to help you determine which quadrature function in MATLAB® to use:
The
quadfunction might be most efficient for low accuracies with nonsmooth integrands.The
quadlfunction might be more efficient thanquadat higher accuracies with smooth integrands.The
quadgkfunction might be most efficient for high accuracies and oscillatory integrands. It supports infinite intervals and can handle moderate singularities at the endpoints. It also supports contour integration along piecewise linear paths.The
quadvfunction vectorizesquadfor an array-valuedfun.If the interval is infinite, , then for the integral of
fun(x)to exist,fun(x)must decay asxapproaches infinity, andquadgkrequires it to decay rapidly. Special methods should be used for oscillatory functions on infinite intervals, butquadgkcan be used iffun(x)decays fast enough.The
quadgkfunction will integrate functions that are singular at finite endpoints if the singularities are not too strong. For example, it will integrate functions that behave at an endpointclikelog|x-c|or|x-c|pforp >= -1/2. If the function is singular at points inside(a,b), write the integral as a sum of integrals over subintervals with the singular points as endpoints, compute them withquadgk, and add the results.
Examples
For the parameterized array-valued function myarrayfun, defined
by
function Y = myarrayfun(x,n) Y = 1./((1:n)+x);
the following command integrates myarrayfun, for the parameter
value n = 10 between a = 0 and b = 1:
Qv = quadv(@(x)myarrayfun(x,10),0,1);
The resulting array Qv has 10 elements estimating Q(k) =
log((k+1)./(k)), for k = 1:10.
The entries in Qv are slightly different than if you compute the
integrals using quad in a loop:
for k = 1:10 Qs(k) = quadv(@(x)myscalarfun(x,k),0,1); end
where myscalarfun is:
function y = myscalarfun(x,k) y = 1./(k+x);
Version History
Introduced before R2006a