Provided by: libstatistics-basic-perl_1.6611-3_all bug

NAME

       Statistics::Basic - A collection of very basic statistics modules

SYNOPSIS

           use Statistics::Basic qw(:all);

       These actually return objects, not numbers.  The objects will interpolate as nicely
       formated numbers (using Number::Format).  Or the actual number will be returned when the
       object is used as a number.

           my $median = median( 1,2,3 );
           my $mean   = mean(  [1,2,3]); # array refs are ok too

           my $variance = variance( 1,2,3 );
           my $stddev   = stddev(   1,2,3 );

       Although passing unblessed numbers and array refs to these functions works, it's sometimes
       better to pass vector objects so the objects can reuse calculated values.

           my $v1       = $mean->query_vector;
           my $variance = variance( $v1 );
           my $stddev   = stddev(   $v1 );

       Here, the mean used by the variance and the variance used by the standard deviation will
       not need to be recalculated.  Now consider these two calculations.

           my $covariance  = covariance(  [1 .. 3], [1 .. 3] );
           my $correlation = correlation( [1 .. 3], [1 .. 3] );

       The covariance above would need to be recalculated by the correlation when these functions
       are called this way.  But, if we instead built vectors first, that wouldn't happen:

           # $v1 is defined above
           my $v2  = vector(1,2,3);
           my $cov = covariance(  $v1, $v2 );
           my $cor = correlation( $v1, $v2 );

       Now $cor can reuse the variance calculated in $cov.

       All of the functions above return objects that interpolate or evaluate as a single string
       or as a number.  Statistics::Basic::LeastSquareFit and Statistics::Basic::Mode are
       different:

           my $unimodal   = mode(1,2,3,3);
           my $multimodal = mode(1,2,3);

           print "The modes are: $unimodal and $multimodal.\n";
           print "The first is multimodal... " if $unimodal->is_multimodal;
           print "The second is multimodal.\n" if $multimodal->is_multimodal;

       In the first case, $unimodal will interpolate as a string and function correctly as a
       number.  However, in the second case, trying to use $multimodal as a number will "croak"
       an error -- it still interpolates fine though.

           my $lsf = leastsquarefit($v1, $v2);

       This $lsf will interpolate fine, showing "LSF( alpha: $alpha, beta: $beta )", but it will
       "croak" if you try to use the object as a number.

           my $v3             = $multimodal->query;
           my ($alpha, $beta) = $lsf->query;
           my $average        = $mean->query;

       All of the objects allow you to explicitly query, if you're not in the mood to use
       overload.

           my @answers = (
               $mode->query,
               $median->query,
               $stddev->query,
           );

SHORTCUTS

       The following shortcut functions can be used in place of calling the module's "new()"
       method directly.

       They all take either array refs or lists as arguments, with the exception of the shortcuts
       that need two vectors to process (e.g.  Statistics::Basic::Correlation).

       vector()
           Returns a Statistics::Basic::Vector object.  Arguments to "vector()" can be any of: an
           array ref, a list of numbers, or a blessed vector object.  If passed a blessed vector
           object, vector will just return the vector passed in.

       mean() average() avg()
           Returns a Statistics::Basic::Mean object.  You can choose to call "mean()" as
           "average()" or "avg()".  Arguments can be any of: an array ref, a list of numbers, or
           a blessed vector object.

       median()
           Returns a Statistics::Basic::Median object.  Arguments can be any of: an array ref, a
           list of numbers, or a blessed vector object.

       mode()
           Returns a Statistics::Basic::Mode object.  Arguments can be any of: an array ref, a
           list of numbers, or a blessed vector object.

       variance() var()
           Returns a Statistics::Basic::Variance object.  You can choose to call "variance()" as
           "var()".  Arguments can be any of: an array ref, a list of numbers, or a blessed
           vector object.  If you will also be calculating the mean of the same list of numbers
           it's recommended to do this:

               my $vec  = vector(1,2,3);
               my $mean = mean($vec);
               my $var  = variance($vec);

           This would also work:

               my $mean = mean(1,2,3);
               my $var  = variance($mean->query_vector);

           This will calculate the same mean twice:

               my $mean = mean(1,2,3);
               my $var  = variance(1,2,3);

           If you really only need the variance, ignore the above and this is fine:

               my $variance = variance(1,2,3,4,5);

       stddev()
           Returns a Statistics::Basic::StdDev object.  Arguments can be any of: an array ref, a
           list of numbers, or a blessed vector object.  Pass a vector object to "stddev()" to
           avoid recalculating the variance and mean if applicable (see "variance()").

       covariance() cov()
           Returns a Statistics::Basic::Covariance object.  Arguments to "covariance()" or
           "cov()" must be array ref or vector objects.  There must be precisely two arguments
           (or none, setting the vectors to two empty ones), and they must be the same length.

       correlation() cor() corr()
           Returns a Statistics::Basic::Correlation object.  Arguments to "correlation()" or
           "cor()"/"corr()" must be array ref or vector objects.  There must be precisely two
           arguments (or none, setting the vectors to two empty ones), and they must be the same
           length.

       leastsquarefit() LSF() lsf()
           Returns a Statistics::Basic::LeastSquareFit object.  Arguments to "leastsquarefit()"
           or "lsf()"/"LSF()" must be array ref or vector objects.  There must be precisely two
           arguments (or none, setting the vectors to two empty ones), and they must be the same
           length.

       computed()
           Returns a Statistics::Basic::ComputedVector object.  Argument must be a blessed vector
           object.  See the section on "COMPUTED VECTORS" for more information on this.

       handle_missing_values() handle_missing()
           Returns two Statistics::Basic::ComputedVector objects.  Arguments to this function
           should be two vector arguments.  See the section on "MISSING VALUES" for further
           information on this function.

COMPUTED VECTORS

       Sometimes it will be handy to have a vector computed from another (or at least that
       updates based on the first).  Consider the case of outliers:

           my @a = ( (1,2,3) x 7, 15 );
           my @b = ( (1,2,3) x 7 );

           my $v1 = vector(@a);
           my $v2 = vector(@b);
           my $v3 = computed($v1);
              $v3->set_filter(sub {
                  my $m = mean($v1);
                  my $s = stddev($v1);

                  grep { abs($_-$m) <= $s } @_;
              });

       This filter sets $v3 to always be equal to $v1 such that all the elements that differ from
       the mean by more than a standard deviation are removed.  As such, "$v2" eq "$v3" since 15
       is clearly an outlier by inspection.

           print "$v1\n";
           print "$v3\n";

       ... prints:

           [1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 15]
           [1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3]

MISSING VALUES

       Something I get asked about quite a lot is, "can S::B handle missing values?"  The answer
       used to be, "that really depends on your data set, use grep," but I recently decided
       (5/29/09) that it was time to just go ahead and add this feature.

       Strictly speaking, the feature was already there.  You simply need to add a couple filters
       to your data.  See "t/75_filtered_missings.t" for the test example.

       This is what people usually mean when they ask if S::B can "handle" missing data:

           my $v1 = vector(1,2,3,undef,4);
           my $v2 = vector(1,2,3,4, undef);
           my $v3 = computed($v1);
           my $v4 = computed($v2);

           $v3->set_filter(sub {
               my @v = $v2->query;
               map {$_[$_]} grep { defined $v[$_] and defined $_[$_] } 0 .. $#_;
           });

           $v4->set_filter(sub {
               my @v = $v1->query;
               map {$_[$_]} grep { defined $v[$_] and defined $_[$_] } 0 .. $#_;
           });

           print "$v1 $v2\n"; # prints: [1, 2, 3, _, 4] [1, 2, 3, 4, _]
           print "$v3 $v4\n"; # prints: [1, 2, 3] [1, 2, 3]

       But I've made it even simpler.  Since this is such a common request, I have provided a
       helper function to build the filters automatically:

           my $v1 = vector(1,2,3,undef,4);
           my $v2 = vector(1,2,3,4, undef);

           my ($f1, $f2) = handle_missing_values($v1, $v2);

           print "$f1 $f2\n"; # prints: [1, 2, 3] [1, 2, 3]

       Note that in practice, you would still manipulate (insert, and shift) $v1 and $v2, not the
       computed vectors.  But for correlations and the like, you would use $f1 and $f2.

           $v1->insert(5);
           $v2->insert(6);

           my $correlation = correlation($f1, $f2);

       You can still insert on $f1 and $f2, but it updates the input vector rather than the
       computed one (which is just a filter handler).

REUSE DETAILS

       Most of the objects have a variety of query functions that allow you to extract the
       objects used within.  Although, the objects are smart enough to prevent needless
       duplication.  That is, the following would test would pass:

           use Statistics::Basic qw(:all);

           my $v1 = vector(1,2,3,4,5);
           my $v2 = vector($v1);
           my $sd = stddev( $v1 );
           my $v3 = $sd->query_vector;
           my $m1 = mean( $v1 );
           my $m2 = $sd->query_mean;
           my $m3 = Statistics::Basic::Mean->new( $v1 );
           my $v4 = $m3->query_vector;

           use Scalar::Util qw(refaddr);
           use Test; plan tests => 5;

           ok( refaddr($v1), refaddr($v2) );
           ok( refaddr($v2), refaddr($v3) );
           ok( refaddr($m1), refaddr($m2) );
           ok( refaddr($m2), refaddr($m3) );
           ok( refaddr($v3), refaddr($v4) );

           # this is t/54_* in the distribution

       Also, note that the mean is only calculated once even though we've calculated a variance
       and a standard deviation above.

       Suppose you'd like a copy of the Statistics::Basic::Variance object that the
       Statistics::Basic::StdDev object is using.  All of the objects within should be accessible
       with query functions as follows.

QUERY FUNCTIONS

       query()
           This method exists in all of the objects.  Statistics::Basic::LeastSquareFit is the
           only one that returns two values (alpha and beta) as a list.
           Statistics::Basic::Vector returns either the list of elements in the vector, or
           reference to that array (depending on the context).  All of the other "query()"
           methods return a single number, the number the module purports to calculate.

       query_mean()
           Returns the Statistics::Basic::Mean object used by Statistics::Basic::Variance and
           Statistics::Basic::StdDev.

       query_mean1()
           Returns the first Statistics::Basic::Mean object used by
           Statistics::Basic::Covariance, Statistics::Basic::Correlation and
           Statistics::Basic::LeastSquareFit.

       query_mean2()
           Returns the second Statistics::Basic::Mean object used by
           Statistics::Basic::Covariance, and Statistics::Basic::Correlation.

       query_covariance()
           Returns the Statistics::Basic::Covariance object used by
           Statistics::Basic::Correlation and Statistics::Basic::LeastSquareFit.

       query_variance()
           Returns the Statistics::Basic::Variance object used by Statistics::Basic::StdDev.

       query_variance1()
           Returns the first Statistics::Basic::Variance object used by
           Statistics::Basic::LeastSquareFit.

       query_vector()
           Returns the Statistics::Basic::Vector object used by any of the single vector modules.

       query_vector1()
           Returns the first Statistics::Basic::Vector object used by any of the two vector
           modules.

       query_vector2()
           Returns the second Statistics::Basic::Vector object used by any of the two vector
           modules.

       is_multimodal()
           Statistics::Basic::Mode objects sometimes return Statistics::Basic::Vector objects
           instead of numbers.  When "is_multimodal()" is true, the mode is a vector, not a
           scalar.

       y_given_x()
           Statistics::Basic::LeastSquareFit is meant for finding a line of best fit.  This
           function can be used to find the "y" for a given "x" based on the calculated $beta
           (slope) and $alpha (y-offset).

       x_given_y()
           Statistics::Basic::LeastSquareFit is meant for finding a line of best fit.  This
           function can be used to find the "x" for a given "y" based on the calculated $beta
           (slope) and $alpha (y-offset).

           This function can produce divide-by-zero errors since it must divide by the slope to
           find the "x" value.  (The slope should rarely be zero though, that's a vertical line
           and would represent very odd data points.)

INSERT and SET FUNCTIONS

       These objects are all intended to be useful while processing long columns of data, like
       data you'd find in a database.

       insert()
           Vectors try to stay the same size when they accept new elements, FIFO style.

               my $v1 = vector(1,2,3); # a 3 touple
                  $v1->insert(4); # still a 3 touple

               print "$v1\n"; # prints: [2, 3, 4]

               $v1->insert(7); # still a 3 touple
               print "$v1\n"; # prints: [3, 4, 7]

           All of the other Statistics::Basic modules have this function too.  The modules that
           track two vectors will need two arguments to insert though.

               my $mean = mean([1,2,3]);
                  $mean->insert(4);

               print "mean: $mean\n"; # prints 3 ... (2+3+4)/3

               my $correlation = correlation($mean->query_vector,
                   $mean->query_vector->copy);

               print "correlation: $correlation\n"; # 1

               $correlation->insert(3,4);
               print "correlation: $correlation\n"; # 0.5

           Also, note that the underlying vectors keep track of recalculating automatically.

               my $v = vector(1,2,3);
               my $m = mean($v);
               my $s = stddev($v);

           The mean has not been calculated yet.

               print "$s; $m\n"; # 0.82; 2

           The mean has been calculated once (even though the Statistics::Basic::StdDev uses it).

               $v->insert(4); print "$s; $m\n"; 0.82; 3
               $m->insert(5); print "$s; $m\n"; 0.82; 4
               $s->insert(6); print "$s; $m\n"; 0.82; 5

           The mean has been calculated thrice more and only thrice more.

       append() ginsert()
           You can grow the vectors instead of sliding them (FIFO). For this, use "append()" (or
           "ginsert()", same thing).

               my $v = vector(1,2,3);
               my $m = mean($v);
               my $s = stddev($v);

               $v->append(4); print "$s; $m\n"; 1.12; 2.5
               $m->append(5); print "$s; $m\n"; 1.41; 3
               $s->append(6); print "$s; $m\n"; 1.71; 1.71

               print "$v\n"; # [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
               print "$s\n"; # 1.71

           Of course, with a correlation, or a covariance, it'd look more like this:

               my $c = correlation([1,2,3], [3,4,5]);
                  $c->append(7,7);

               print "c=$c\n"; # c=0.98

       set_vector()
           This allows you to set the vector to a known state.  It takes either array ref or
           vector objects.

               my $v1 = vector(1,2,3);
               my $v2 = $v1->copy;
                  $v2->set_vector([4,5,6]);

               my $m = mean();

               $m->set_vector([1,2,3]);
               $m->set_vector($v2);

               my $c = correlation();

               $c->set_vector($v1,$v2);
               $c->set_vector([1,2,3], [4,5,6]);

       set_size()
           This sets the size of the vector.  When the vector is made bigger, the vector is
           filled to the new length with leading zeros (i.e., they are the first to be kicked out
           after new "insert()"s.

               my $v = vector(1,2,3);
                  $v->set_size(7);

               print "$v\n"; # [0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 3]

               my $m = mean();
                  $m->set_size(7);

               print "", $m->query_vector, "\n";
                # [0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]

               my $c = correlation([3],[3]);
                  $c->set_size(7);

               print "", $c->query_vector1, "\n";
               print "", $c->query_vector2, "\n";
                # [0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 3]
                # [0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 3]

OPTIONS

       Each of the following options can be specified on package import like this.

           use Statistics::Basic qw(unbias=0); # start with unbias disabled
           use Statistics::Basic qw(unbias=1); # start with unbias enabled

       When specified on import, each option has certain defaults.

           use Statistics::Basic qw(unbias); # start with unbias enabled
           use Statistics::Basic qw(nofill); # start with nofill enabled
           use Statistics::Basic qw(toler);  # start with toler disabled
           use Statistics::Basic qw(ipres);  # start with ipres=2

       Additionally, with the exception of "ignore_env", they can all be accessed via package
       variables of the same name in all upper case.  Example:

           # code code code

           $Statistics::Basic::UNBIAS = 0; # turn UNBIAS off

           # code code code

           $Statistics::Basic::UNBIAS = 1; # turn it back on

           # code code code

           {
               local $Statistics::Basic::DEBUG_STATS_B = 1; # debug, this block only
           }

       Special caveat: "toler" can in fact be changed via the package var (e.g.,
       "$Statistics::Basic::TOLER=0.0001").  But, for speed reasons, it must be defined before
       any other packages are imported or it will not actually do anything when changed.

       unbias
           This module uses the sum(X - mean(X))/N definition of variance.

           If you wish to use the unbiased, sum(X-mean(X)/(N-1) definition, then set the
           $Statistics::Basic::UNBIAS true (possibly with "use Statistics::Basic qw(unbias)").

           This can be changed at any time with the package variable or at compile time.

           This feature was requested by "Robert McGehee <xxxxxxxx@wso.williams.edu>".

           [NOTE 2008-11-06: <http://cpanratings.perl.org/dist/Statistics-Basic>, this can also
           be called "population (n)" vs "sample (n-1)" and is indeed fully addressed right
           here!]

       ipres
           "ipres" defaults to 2.  It is passed to Number::Format as the second argument to
           format_number() during string interpolation (see: overload).

       toler
           When set, $Statistics::Basic::TOLER (which is not enabled by default), instructs the
           stats objects to test true when within some tolerable range, pretty much like this:

               sub is_equal {
                   return abs($_[0]-$_[1])<$Statistics::Basic::TOLER
                       if defined($Statistics::Basic::TOLER)

                   return $_[0] == $_[1]
               }

           For performance reasons, this must be defined before the import of any other
           Statistics::Basic modules or the modules will fail to overload the "==" operator.

           $Statistics::Basic::TOLER totally disabled:

               use Statistics::Basic qw(:all toler);

           $Statistics::Basic::TOLER disabled, but changeable:

               use Statistics::Basic qw(:all toler=0);

               $Statistics::Basic::TOLER = 0.000_001;

           You can change the tolerance at runtime, but it must be set (or unset) at compile time
           before the packages load.

       nofill
           Normally when you set the size of a vector it automatically fills with zeros on the
           first-out side of the vector.  You can disable the autofilling with this option.  It
           can be changed at any time.

       debug
           Enable debugging with "use Statistics::Basic qw(debug)" or disable a specific level
           (including 0 to disable) with "use Statistics::Basic qw(debug=2)".

           This is also accessible at runtime using $Statistics::Basic::DEBUG_STATS_B and can be
           switched on and off at any time.

       ignore_env
           Normally the defaults for these options can be changed in the environment of the
           program.  Example:

               UNBIAS=1 perl ./myprog.pl

           This does the same thing as "$Statistics::Basic::UNBIAS=1" or "use Statistics::Basic
           qw(unbias)" unless you disable the %ENV checking with this option.

               use Statistics::Basic qw(ignore_env);

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       You can change the defaults (assuming ignore_env is not used) from your bash prompt.
       Example:

           DEBUG_STATS_B=1 perl ./myprog.pl

       $ENV{DEBUG_STATS_B}
           Sets the default value of "debug".

       $ENV{UNBIAS}
           Sets the default value of "unbias".

       $ENV{NOFILL}
           Sets the default value of "nofill".

       $ENV{IPRES}
           Sets the default value of "ipres".

       $ENV{TOLER}
           Sets the default value of "toler".

OVERLOADS

       All of the objects are true in numeric context.  All of the objects print useful strings
       when evaluated as a string.  Most of the objects evaluate usefully as numbers, although
       Statistics::Basic::Vector objects, Statistics::Basic::ComputedVector objects, and
       Statistics::Basic::LeastSquareFit objects do not -- they instead raise an error.

Author's note on Statistics::Descriptive

       I've been asked a couple times now why I don't link to Statistics::Descriptive in my see
       also section.  As a rule, I only link to packages there that I think are related or that I
       actually used in the package construction.  I've never personally used Descriptive, but it
       surely seems to do quite a lot more.  In a sense, this package really doesn't do
       statistics, not like a scientist would think about it anyway.  So I always figured people
       could find their own way to Descriptive anyway.

       The one thing this package does do, that I don't think Descriptive does (correct me if I'm
       wrong) is time difference computations.  If there are say, 200 things in the mean object,
       then after inserting (using this package) there'll still be 200 things, allowing the
       computation of a moving average, moving stddev, moving correlation, etc.  You might argue
       that this is rarely needed, but it is really the only time I need to compute these things.

         while( $data = $fetch_sth->fetchrow_arrayref ) {
             $mean->insert($data);
             $moving_avg_sth->execute(0 + $mean);
         }

       Since I opened the topic I'd also like to mention that I find this package easier to use.
       That is a matter of taste and since I wrote this, you might say I'm a little biased.  Your
       mileage may vary.

AUTHOR

       Paul Miller "<jettero@cpan.org>"

       I am using this software in my own projects...  If you find bugs, please please please let
       me know. :) Actually, let me know if you find it handy at all.  Half the fun of releasing
       this stuff is knowing that people use it.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright 2012 Paul Miller -- Licensed under the LGPL version 2.

SEE ALSO

       perl(1), Number::Format, overload, Statistics::Basic::Vector,
       Statistics::Basic::ComputedVector, Statistics::Basic::_OneVectorBase,
       Statistics::Basic::Mean, Statistics::Basic::Median, Statistics::Basic::Mode,
       Statistics::Basic::Variance, Statistics::Basic::StdDev, Statistics::Basic::_TwoVectorBase,
       Statistics::Basic::Correlation, Statistics::Basic::Covariance,
       Statistics::Basic::LeastSquareFit