Provided by: minpack-dev_19961126+dfsg1-5build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       hybrj_, hybrj1_ - find a zero of a system of nonlinear function

SYNOPSIS

       #include <minpack.h>

       void hybrj1_ (void (*fcn)(int *n, double *x, double *fvec, double *fjac, int *ldfjac, int *iflag),
           int *n, double *x, double *fvec, double *fjac,
           int *ldfjac,
           double *tol, int *info, double *wa, int *lwa);

       void hybrj_ (void (*fcn)(int *n, double *x, double *fvec, double *fjac, int *ldfjac, int *iflag),
           int *n, double *x, double *fvec, double *fjac,
           int *ldfjac,
           double *xtol, int *maxfev, double *diag, int *mode, double *factor, int *nprint, int *info, int
           *nfev,
           int *njev, double *r, int *lr, double *qtf,
           double *wa1, double *wa2, double *wa3, double *wa4);

DESCRIPTION

       The purpose of hybrj_ is to find a zero of a system  of  n  nonlinear  functions  in  n  variables  by  a
       modification  of  the  Powell  hybrid  method.  The  user  must provide a subroutine which calculates the
       functions and a subroutine which calculates the Jacobian.

       hybrj1_ serves the same function but has a simplified calling sequence.

   Language notes
       hybrj_ and hybrj1_ are written in FORTRAN. If calling from C, keep these points in mind:

       Name mangling.
              With gfortran, all the function names end in an underscore.

       Compile with gfortran.
              Even if your program is all C code, you should link with gfortran so it will pull in  the  FORTRAN
              libraries  automatically.  It's easiest just to use gfortran to do all the compiling.  (It handles
              C just fine.)

       Call by reference.
              All function parameters must be pointers.

       Column-major arrays.
              Suppose a function returns an array with 5 rows and 3 columns in an array z and in  the  call  you
              have declared a leading dimension of 7.  The FORTRAN and equivalent C references are:

                   z(1,1)         z[0]
                   z(2,1)         z[1]
                   z(5,1)         z[4]
                   z(1,2)         z[7]
                   z(1,3)         z[14]
                   z(i,j)         z[(i-1) + (j-1)*7]

   Parameters for both functions
       fcn  is  the name of the user-supplied subroutine which calculates the functions. In FORTRAN, fcn must be
       declared in an external statement in the user calling program, and should be written as follows:

       subroutine fcn(n,x,fvec,fjac,ldfjac,iflag)
       integer n,ldfjac,iflag
       double precision x(n),fvec(n),fjac(ldfjac,n)
       ----------
       if iflag = 1 calculate the functions at x and
       return this vector in fvec. do not alter fjac.
       if iflag = 2 calculate the jacobian at x and
       return this matrix in fjac. do not alter fvec.
       ---------
       return
       end

       In C, fcn should be written as follows:

         void fcn(int *n, double *x, double *fvec, double *fjac,
                  int *ldfjac, int *iflag)
         {
         /* if iflag = 1 calculate the functions at x and
            return this vector in fvec. do not alter fjac.
            if iflag = 2 calculate the jacobian at x and
            return this matrix in fjac. do not alter fvec. */
         }

       The value of iflag should not be changed by fcn unless the user wants to terminate execution  of  hybrj_.
       In this case set iflag to a negative integer.

       n is a positive integer input variable set to the number of functions and variables.

       x  is an array of length n. On input x must contain an initial estimate of the solution vector. On output
       x contains the final estimate of the solution vector.

       fjac is an output n by n array which contains the orthogonal matrix q produced by the qr factorization of
       the final approximate jacobian.

       ldfjac  is a positive integer input variable not less than n which specifies the leading dimension of the
       array fjac.

       fvec is an output array of length n which contains the functions evaluated at the output x.

   Parameters for hybrj1_
       tol is a nonnegative input variable. Termination occurs when the algorithm estimates  that  the  relative
       error between x and the solution is at most tol.

       info  is  an integer output variable. If the user has terminated execution, info is set to the (negative)
       value of iflag. See description of fcn. Otherwise, info is set as follows.

       info = 0   improper input parameters.

       info = 1   algorithm estimates that the relative error
                  between x and the solution is at most tol.

       info = 2   number of calls to fcn has reached or exceeded
                  200*(n+1).

       info = 3   tol is too small. No further improvement in
                  the approximate solution x is possible.

       info = 4   iteration is not making good progress.

       wa is a work array of length lwa.

       lwa is a positive integer input variable not less than (n*(3*n+13))/2.

   Parameters for hybrj_
       xtol is a nonnegative input variable. Termination occurs when the relative error between two  consecutive
       iterates is at most xtol.

       maxfev  is  a  positive  integer input variable. Termination occurs when the number of calls to fcn is at
       least maxfev by the end of an iteration.

       diag is an array of length n. If mode = 1 (see below), diag is internally set. If mode  =  2,  diag  must
       contain positive entries that serve as multiplicative scale factors for the variables.

       mode is an integer input variable. If mode = 1, the variables will be scaled internally. If mode = 2, the
       scaling is specified by the input diag. Other values of mode are equivalent to mode = 1.

       factor is a positive input variable used in determining the initial step bound. This bound is set to  the
       product  of  factor  and the euclidean norm of diag*x if nonzero, or else to factor itself. In most cases
       factor should lie in the interval (.1,100.). 100. Is a generally recommended value.

       nprint is an integer input variable that enables controlled printing of iterates if it  is  positive.  In
       this  case,  fcn  is  called  with  iflag  =  0  at the beginning of the first iteration and every nprint
       iterations thereafter and immediately prior to return, with x and fvec available for printing. If  nprint
       is not positive, no special calls of fcn with iflag = 0 are made.

       info  is  an integer output variable. If the user has terminated execution, info is set to the (negative)
       value of iflag. See description of fcn. Otherwise, info is set as follows.

       info = 0   improper input parameters.

       info = 1   relative error between two consecutive iterates
                  is at most xtol.

       info = 2   number of calls to fcn has reached or exceeded
                  maxfev.

       info = 3   xtol is too small. No further improvement in
                  the approximate solution x is possible.

       info = 4   iteration is not making good progress, as
                  measured by the improvement from the last
                  five jacobian evaluations.

       info = 5   iteration is not making good progress, as
                  measured by the improvement from the last
                  ten iterations.

       nfev is an integer output variable set to the number of calls to fcn.

       fjac is an output n by n array which contains the orthogonal matrix q produced by the qr factorization of
       the final approximate jacobian.

       ldfjac  is a positive integer input variable not less than n which specifies the leading dimension of the
       array fjac.

       r is an output array of length lr  which  contains  the  upper  triangular  matrix  produced  by  the  qr
       factorization of the final approximate Jacobian, stored rowwise.

       lr is a positive integer input variable not less than (n*(n+1))/2.

       qtf is an output array of length n which contains the vector (q transpose)*fvec.

       wa1, wa2, wa3, and wa4 are work arrays of length n.

SEE ALSO

       hybrd(3), hybrd1(3).

AUTHORS

       Burton S. Garbow, Kenneth E. Hillstrom, Jorge J. More.
       This  manual page was written by Jim Van Zandt <jrv@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may
       be used by others).