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- GNU Scientific Library — GSL 2. 8 documentation
GNU Scientific Library¶ Introduction Routines available in GSL; GSL is Free Software; Obtaining GSL; No Warranty
- Introduction — GSL 2. 8 documentation - GNU
The GNU Scientific Library (GSL) is a collection of routines for numerical computing The routines have been written from scratch in C, and present a modern Applications Programming Interface (API) for C programmers, allowing wrappers to be written for very high level languages The source code is distributed under the GNU General Public License
- Using the Library — GSL 2. 8 documentation - GNU
The library does not rely on any non-ANSI extensions in the interface it exports to the user Programs you write using GSL can be ANSI compliant Extensions which can be used in a way compatible with pure ANSI C are supported, however, via conditional compilation This allows the library to take advantage of compiler extensions on those
- GNU Scientific Library - Table of Contents
The GNU Scientific Library is a library of scientific subroutines It aims to provide a convenient interface to routines that do standard (and not so standard) tasks that arise in scientific research More than that, it also provides the source code Users are welcome to alter, adjust, modify, and improve the interfaces and or implementations
- GNU Scientific Library
4 8 ApproximateComparisonofFloatingPointNumbers 21 5 ComplexNumbers 23 5 1 Representationofcomplexnumbers
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