Provided by: pdl_2.007-2build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       PDL::BadValues - Discussion of bad value support in PDL

DESCRIPTION

   What are bad values and why should I bother with them?
       Sometimes it's useful to be able to specify a certain value is 'bad' or 'missing'; for example CCDs used
       in astronomy produce 2D images which are not perfect since certain areas contain invalid data due to
       imperfections in the detector.  Whilst PDL's powerful index routines and all the complicated business
       with dataflow, slices, etc etc mean that these regions can be ignored in processing, it's awkward to do.
       It would be much easier to be able to say "$c = $a + $b" and leave all the hassle to the computer.

       If you're not interested in this, then you may (rightly) be concerned with how this affects the speed of
       PDL, since the overhead of checking for a bad value at each operation can be large.  Because of this, the
       code has been written to be as fast as possible - particularly when operating on piddles which do not
       contain bad values.  In fact, you should notice essentially no speed difference when working with piddles
       which do not contain bad values.

       However, if you do not want bad values, then PDL's "WITH_BADVAL" configuration option comes to the
       rescue; if set to 0 or undef, the bad-value support is ignored.  About the only time I think you'll need
       to use this - I admit, I'm biased ;) - is if you have limited disk or memory space, since the size of the
       code is increased (see below).

       You may also ask 'well, my computer supports IEEE NaN, so I already have this'.  Well, yes and no - many
       routines, such as "y=sin(x)", will propagate NaN's without the user having to code differently, but
       routines such as "qsort", or finding the median of an array, need to be re-coded to handle bad values.
       For floating-point datatypes, "NaN" and "Inf" are used to flag bad values IF the option "BADVAL_USENAN"
       is set to 1 in your config file.  Otherwise special values are used (Default bad values).  I do not have
       any benchmarks to see which option is faster.

       There is an experimental feature "BADVAL_PER_PDL" which, if set, allows you to have different bad values
       for separate piddles of the same type. This currently does not work with the "BADVAL_USENAN" option; if
       both are set then PDL will ignore the "BADVAL_USENAN" value.

   Code increase due to bad values
       The following comparison is out of date!

       On an i386 machine running Linux and Perl 5.005_03, I measured the following sizes (the Slatec code was
       compiled in, but none of the other options: e.g., FFTW, GSL, and TriD were):

       WITH_BADVAL = 0
           Size of blib directory after a successful make = 4963 kb: blib/arch = 2485 kb and blib/lib = 1587 kb.

       WITH_BADVAL = 1
           Size of blib directory after a successful make = 5723 kb: blib/arch = 3178 kb and blib/lib = 1613 kb.

       So, the overall increase is only 15% - not much to pay for all the wonders that bad values provides ;)

       The  source  code  used  for  this  test  had the vast majority of the core routines (eg those in Basic/)
       converted to use bad values, whilst very few of the 'external' routines (i.e. everything else in the  PDL
       distribution) had been changed.

   A quick overview
        pdl> p $PDL::Bad::Status
        1
        pdl> $a = sequence(4,3);
        pdl> p $a
        [
         [ 0  1  2  3]
         [ 4  5  6  7]
         [ 8  9 10 11]
        ]
        pdl> $a = $a->setbadif( $a % 3 == 2 )
        pdl> p $a
        [
         [  0   1 BAD   3]
         [  4 BAD   6   7]
         [BAD   9  10 BAD]
        ]
        pdl> $a *= 3
        pdl> p $a
        [
         [  0   3 BAD   9]
         [ 12 BAD  18  21]
         [BAD  27  30 BAD]
        ]
        pdl> p $a->sum
        120

       "demo  bad"  and  "demo  bad2" within perldl or pdl2 gives a demonstration of some of the things possible
       with bad values.  These are  also  available  on  PDL's  web-site,  at  http://pdl.perl.org/demos/.   See
       PDL::Bad for useful routines for working with bad values and t/bad.t to see them in action.

       The intention is to:

       •   not significantly affect PDL for users who don't need bad value support

       •   be as fast as possible when bad value support is installed

       If  you never want bad value support, then you set "WITH_BADVAL" to 0 in perldl.conf; PDL then has no bad
       value support compiled in, so will be as fast as it used to be.

       However, in most cases, the bad value support has a  negligible  affect  on  speed,  so  you  should  set
       "WITH_CONFIG"  to  1!  One  exception  is  if you are low on memory, since the amount of code produced is
       larger (but only by about 15% - see "Code increase due to bad values").

       To find  out  if  PDL  has  been  compiled  with  bad  value  support,  look  at  the  values  of  either
       $PDL::Config{WITH_BADVAL} or $PDL::Bad::Status - if true then it has been.

       To  find  out  if  a routine supports bad values, use the "badinfo" command in perldl or pdl2 or the "-b"
       option to pdldoc.  This facility is currently a 'proof of concept' (or, more realistically, a quick hack)
       so expect it to be rough around the edges.

       Each piddle contains a flag - accessible via "$pdl->badflag" -  to  say  whether  there's  any  bad  data
       present:

       •   If  false/0,  which  means  there's  no  bad  data  here,  the  code supplied by the "Code" option to
           "pp_def()" is executed. This means that the  speed  should  be  very  close  to  that  obtained  with
           "WITH_BADVAL=0", since the only overhead is several accesses to a bit in the piddles state variable.

       •   If  true/1,  then  this  says  there  MAY be bad data in the piddle, so use the code in the "BadCode"
           option (assuming that the "pp_def()" for this routine has been updated to have a BadCode  key).   You
           get  all the advantages of threading, as with the "Code" option, but it will run slower since you are
           going to have to handle the presence of bad values.

       If  you  create  a  piddle,  it  will  have  its  bad-value  flag  set  to  0.  To   change   this,   use
       "$pdl->badflag($new_bad_status)",  where $new_bad_status can be 0 or 1.  When a routine creates a piddle,
       its bad-value flag will depend on the input piddles:  unless  over-ridden  (see  the  "CopyBadStatusCode"
       option  to "pp_def"), the bad-value flag will be set true if any of the input piddles contain bad values.
       To check that a piddle really contains bad data, use the "check_badflag" method.

       NOTE: propogation of the badflag

       If you change the badflag of a piddle, this change is propagated to all the children of a piddle, so

          pdl> $a = zeroes(20,30);
          pdl> $b = $a->slice('0:10,0:10');
          pdl> $c = $b->slice(',(2)');
          pdl> print ">>c: ", $c->badflag, "\n";
          >>c: 0
          pdl> $a->badflag(1);
          pdl> print ">>c: ", $c->badflag, "\n";
          >>c: 1

       No change is made to the parents of a piddle, so

          pdl> print ">>a: ", $a->badflag, "\n";
          >>a: 1
          pdl> $c->badflag(0);
          pdl> print ">>a: ", $a->badflag, "\n";
          >>a: 1

       Thoughts:

       •   the badflag can ONLY be cleared IF a piddle has NO parents, and that this change  will  propagate  to
           all the children of that piddle. I am not so keen on this anymore (too awkward to code, for one).

       •   "$a->badflag(1)" should propagate the badflag to BOTH parents and children.

       This  shouldn't  be  hard to implement (although an initial attempt failed!).  Does it make sense though?
       There's also the issue of what happens if you change the badvalue of a piddle - should these propagate to
       children/parents (yes) or whether you should only be able to change the badvalue at  the  'top'  level  -
       i.e. those piddles which do not have parents.

       The  "orig_badvalue()"  method  returns the compile-time value for a given datatype. It works on piddles,
       PDL::Type objects, and numbers - eg

         $pdl->orig_badvalue(), byte->orig_badvalue(), and orig_badvalue(4).

       It also has a horrible name...

       To get the current bad value, use the "badvalue()" method - it has the same syntax as "orig_badvalue()".

       To change the current bad value, supply the new number to badvalue - eg

         $pdl->badvalue(2.3), byte->badvalue(2), badvalue(5,-3e34).

       Note: the value is silently converted to the correct C type, and returned  -  i.e.  "byte->badvalue(-26)"
       returns  230  on  my  Linux machine.  It is also a "nop" for floating-point types when "BADVAL_USENAN" is
       true.

       Note that changes to the bad value are NOT propagated to previously-created piddles  -  they  will  still
       have  the  bad  value set, but suddenly the elements that were bad will become 'good', but containing the
       old bad value.  See discussion below.  It's not a problem for floating-point types which use  NaN,  since
       you can not change their badvalue.

   Bad values and boolean operators
       For  those  boolean  operators in PDL::Ops, evaluation on a bad value returns the bad value.  Whilst this
       means that

        $mask = $img > $thresh;

       correctly propagates bad values, it will cause problems for checks such as

        do_something() if any( $img > $thresh );

       which need to be re-written as something like

        do_something() if any( setbadtoval( ($img > $thresh), 0 ) );

       When using one of the 'projection' functions in PDL::Ufunc - such as orover - bad values are skipped over
       (see the documentation of these functions for the current (poor) handling of the case when  all  elements
       are bad).

   A bad value for each piddle, and related issues
       An experimental option "BADVAL_PER_PDL" has been added to perldl.conf to allow per-piddle bad values. The
       documentation has not been updated to account for this change.

       The following is relevant only for integer types, and for floating-point types if "BADVAL_USENAN" was not
       set when PDL was built.

       Currently, there is one bad value for each datatype. The code is written so that we could have a separate
       bad value for each piddle (stored in the pdl structure) - this would then remove the current problem of:

        pdl> $a = byte( 1, 2, byte->badvalue, 4, 5 );
        pdl> p $a;
        [1 2 255 4 5]
        pdl> $a->badflag(1)
        pdl> p $a;
        [1 2 BAD 4 5]
        pdl> byte->badvalue(0);
        pdl> p $a;
        [1 2 255 4 5]

       ie  the  bad  value  in  $a  has  lost  its bad status using the current implementation.  It would almost
       certainly cause problems elsewhere though!

IMPLEMENTATION DETAILS

       During a "perl Makefile.PL", the file Basic/Core/badsupport.p is created; this file contains  the  values
       of  the "WITH_BADVAL", "BADVAL_USENAN" and "BADVAL_PER_PDL" variables, and should be used by code that is
       executed before the PDL::Config file is created (e.g. Basic/Core/pdlcore.c.PL.  However,  most  PDL  code
       will  just  need  to  access the %PDL::Config array (e.g. Basic/Bad/bad.pd) to find out whether bad-value
       support is required.

       A new flag has been added to the state of a piddle - "PDL_BADVAL". If unset, then  the  piddle  does  not
       contain  bad  values,  and so all the support code can be ignored. If set, it does not guarantee that bad
       values are present, just that they should be checked  for.  Thanks  to  Christian,  "badflag()"  -  which
       sets/clears this flag (see Basic/Bad/bad.pd) - will update ALL the children/grandchildren/etc of a piddle
       if    its    state    changes   (see   "badflag"   in   Basic/Bad/bad.pd   and   "propagate_badflag"   in
       Basic/Core/Core.xs.PL).  It's not clear what to do with parents: I can see the reason for  propagating  a
       'set  badflag'  request  to  parents,  but  I  think a child should NOT be able to clear the badflag of a
       parent.  There's also the issue of what happens when you change the bad value for a piddle.

       The "pdl_trans" structure has been extended to include an integer value,  "bvalflag",  which  acts  as  a
       switch  to  tell  the  code  whether  to  handle bad values or not. This value is set if any of the input
       piddles  have  their  "PDL_BADVAL"  flag  set  (although  this  code   can   be   replaced   by   setting
       "FindBadStateCode"  in pp_def).  The logic of the check is going to get a tad more complicated if I allow
       routines to fall back to using the "Code" section for floating-point  types  (i.e.  those  routines  with
       "NoBadifNaN => 1" when "BADVAL_USENAN" is true).

       The  bad  values  for  the  integer  types  are now stored in a structure within the Core PDL structure -
       "PDL.bvals" (eg Basic/Core/pdlcore.h.PL); see also "typedef badvals" in Basic/Core/pdl.h.PL and the  BOOT
       code  of  Basic/Core/Core.xs.PL  where  the  values  are initialised to (hopefully) sensible values.  See
       PDL/Bad/bad.pd for read/write routines to the values.

       The addition of the "BADVAL_PER_PDL" option has resulted  in  additional  changes  to  the  internals  of
       piddles. These changes are not documented yet.

   Why not make a PDL subclass?
       The support for bad values could have been done as a PDL sub-class.  The advantage of this approach would
       be that you only load in the code to handle bad values if you actually want to use them.  The downside is
       that  the  code  then  gets  separated:  any  bug  fixes/improvements  have to be done to the code in two
       different files.  With the present approach the code is in the same "pp_def" function (although there  is
       still the problem that both "Code" and "BadCode" sections need updating).

   Default bad values
       The default/original bad values are set to (taken from the Starlink distribution):

         #include <limits.h>

         PDL_Byte    ==  UCHAR_MAX
         PDL_Short   ==   SHRT_MIN
         PDL_Ushort  ==  USHRT_MAX
         PDL_Long    ==    INT_MIN

       If "BADVAL_USENAN == 0", then we also have

         PDL_Float   ==   -FLT_MAX
         PDL_Double  ==   -DBL_MAX

       otherwise  all  of "NaN", "+Inf", and "-Inf" are taken to be bad for floating-point types.  In this case,
       the bad value can't be changed, unlike the integer types.

   How do I change a routine to handle bad values?
       Examples can be found in most of the *.pd files in Basic/ (and hopefully many more places  soon!).   Some
       of the logic might appear a bit unclear - that's probably because it is! Comments appreciated.

       All  routines  should  automatically  propagate the bad status flag to output piddles, unless you declare
       otherwise.

       If a routine explicitly deals with bad values, you must provide this option to pp_def:

          HandleBad => 1

       This ensures that the correct variables are initialised for the $ISBAD etc macros. It is also used by the
       automatic document-creation routines to provide default information on the bad value support of a routine
       without the user having to type it themselves (this is in its early stages).

       To flag a routine as NOT handling bad values, use

          HandleBad => 0

       This should cause the routine to print a warning if  it's  sent  any  piddles  with  the  bad  flag  set.
       Primitive's "intover" has had this set - since it would be awkward to convert - but I've not tried it out
       to see if it works.

       If  you  want  to  handle bad values but not set the state of all the output piddles, or if it's only one
       input piddle that's important, then look at the PP rules  "NewXSFindBadStatus"  and  "NewXSCopyBadStatus"
       and the corresponding "pp_def" options:

       FindBadStatusCode
           By  default,  "FindBadStatusCode" creates code which sets "$PRIV(bvalflag)" depending on the state of
           the bad flag of the input piddles: see "findbadstatus" in Basic/Gen/PP.pm.  User-defined code  should
           also store the value of "bvalflag" in the "$BADFLAGCACHE()" variable.

       CopyBadStatusCode
           The  default  code  here  is  a  bit simpler than for "FindBadStatusCode": the bad flag of the output
           piddles are set  if  "$BADFLAGCACHE()"  is  true  after  the  code  has  been  evaluated.   Sometimes
           "CopyBadStatusCode"  is set to an empty string, with the responsibility of setting the badflag of the
           output   piddle   left   to   the   "BadCode"   section   (e.g.    the    "xxxover"    routines    in
           Basic/Primitive/primitive.pd).

           Prior  to  PDL  2.4.3 we used "$PRIV(bvalflag)" instead of "$BADFLAGCACHE()". This is dangerous since
           the "$PRIV()" structure is not guaranteed to be valid at this point in the code.

       If you have a routine that you want to be able to use as in-place, look at the  routines  in  bad.pd  (or
       ops.pd)  which  use  the  "in-place"  option  to see how the bad flag is propagated to children using the
       "xxxBadStatusCode" options.  I decided not to automate this as rules would be a little complex, since not
       every in-place op will need to propagate the badflag (eg unary functions).

       If the option

          HandleBad => 1

       is given, then many things happen.  For integer types, the readdata code automatically creates a variable
       called "<pdl name>_badval", which contains the bad value for  that  piddle  (see  "get_xsdatapdecl()"  in
       Basic/Gen/PP/PdlParObjs.pm).   However,  do  not  hard code this name into your code!  Instead use macros
       (thanks to Tuomas for the suggestion):

         '$ISBAD(a(n=>1))'  expands to '$a(n=>1) == a_badval'
         '$ISGOOD(a())'                '$a()     != a_badval'
         '$SETBAD(bob())'              '$bob()    = bob_badval'

       well, the "$a(...)" is expanded as well. Also, you can use a "$" before the pdl name, if you so wish, but
       it begins to look like line noise - eg "$ISGOOD($a())".

       If you cache a piddle value in a variable -- eg "index"  in  slices.pd  --  the  following  routines  are
       useful:

          '$ISBADVAR(c_var,pdl)'       'c_var == pdl_badval'
          '$ISGOODVAR(c_var,pdl)'      'c_var != pdl_badval'
          '$SETBADVAR(c_var,pdl)'      'c_var  = pdl_badval'

       The following have been introduced, They may need playing around with to improve their use.

         '$PPISBAD(CHILD,[i])          'CHILD_physdatap[i] == CHILD_badval'
         '$PPISGOOD(CHILD,[i])         'CHILD_physdatap[i] != CHILD_badval'
         '$PPSETBAD(CHILD,[i])         'CHILD_physdatap[i]  = CHILD_badval'

       If  "BADVAL_USENAN"  is set, then it's a bit different for "float" and "double", where we consider "NaN",
       "+Inf", and "-Inf" all to be bad. In this case:

         ISBAD   becomes   finite(piddle) == 0
         ISGOOD            finite(piddle) != 0
         SETBAD            piddle          = NaN

       where the value for NaN is discussed below in Handling NaN values.

       This all means that you can change

          Code => '$a() = $b() + $c();'

       to

          BadCode => 'if ( $ISBAD(b()) || $ISBAD(c()) ) {
                        $SETBAD(a());
                      } else {
                        $a() = $b() + $c();
                      }'

       leaving Code as it is. PP::PDLCode will then create a loop something like

          if ( __trans->bvalflag ) {
               threadloop over BadCode
          } else {
               threadloop over Code
          }

       (it's probably easier to just look at the .xs file to see what goes on).

   Going beyond the Code section
       Similar to "BadCode", there's "BadBackCode", and "BadRedoDimsCode".

       Handling "EquivCPOffsCode" is a bit different: under the assumption that the only access to data  is  via
       the  "$EQUIVCPOFFS(i,j)"  macro,  then  we  can  automatically  create  the  'bad' version of it; see the
       "[EquivCPOffsCode]" and "[Code]" rules in PDL::PP.

   Macro access to the bad flag of a piddle
       Macros have been provided to provide access to the bad-flag status of a pdl:

         '$PDLSTATEISBAD(a)'    -> '($PDL(a)->state & PDL_BADVAL) > 0'
         '$PDLSTATEISGOOD(a)'      '($PDL(a)->state & PDL_BADVAL) == 0'

         '$PDLSTATESETBAD(a)'      '$PDL(a)->state |= PDL_BADVAL'
         '$PDLSTATESETGOOD(a)'     '$PDL(a)->state &= ~PDL_BADVAL'

       For use in "xxxxBadStatusCode" (+ other stuff that goes into the INIT: section) there are:

         '$SETPDLSTATEBAD(a)'       -> 'a->state |= PDL_BADVAL'
         '$SETPDLSTATEGOOD(a)'      -> 'a->state &= ~PDL_BADVAL'

         '$ISPDLSTATEBAD(a)'        -> '((a->state & PDL_BADVAL) > 0)'
         '$ISPDLSTATEGOOD(a)'       -> '((a->state & PDL_BADVAL) == 0)'

       In  PDL  2.4.3  the  "$BADFLAGCACHE()"  macro  was  introduced  for  use   in   "FindBadStatusCode"   and
       "CopyBadStatusCode".

   Handling NaN values
       There are two issues:

       NaN as the bad value
           which  is  done.   To  select,  set  "BADVAL_USENAN"  to 1 in perldl.conf; a value of 0 falls back to
           treating the floating-point types the same as the integers.  I need to  do  some  benchmarks  to  see
           which  is  faster, and whether it's dependent on machines (Linux seems to slow down much more than my
           Sparc machine in some very simple tests I did).

       Ignoring BadCode sections
           which is not.

       For simple routines processing floating-point numbers, we should let the computer process the bad  values
       (i.e.  "NaN"  and  "Inf"  values) instead of using the code in the "BadCode" section.  Many such routines
       have been labeled using "NoBadifNaN => 1"; however this is currently ignored by PDL::PP.

       For these routines, we want to use the "Code" section if

         the piddle does not have its bad flag set
         the datatype is a float or double

       otherwise we use the "BadCode" section.  This is NOT IMPLEMENTED, as it will require  reasonable  hacking
       of PP::PDLCode!

       There's  also  the  problem  of  how we handle 'exceptions' - since "$a = pdl(2) / pdl(0)" produces a bad
       value but doesn't update the badflag value of the piddle.  Can we catch an exception, or do  we  have  to
       trap for this (e.g. search for "exception" in Basic/Ops/ops.pd)?

       Checking for "Nan", and "Inf" is done by using the "finite()" system call.  If you want to set a value to
       the  "NaN"  value, the following bit of code can be used (this can be found in both Basic/Core/Core.xs.PL
       and Basic/Bad/bad.pd):

         /* for big-endian machines */
         static union { unsigned char __c[4]; float __d; }
               __pdl_nan = { { 0x7f, 0xc0, 0, 0 } };

         /* for little-endian machines */
         static union { unsigned char __c[4]; float __d; }
               __pdl_nan = { { 0, 0, 0xc0, 0x7f } };

       This approach should probably be replaced by library routines such as "nan("")" or "atof("NaN")".

       To find out whether a particular machine is big endian, use the routine "PDL::Core::Dev::isbigendian()".

WHAT ABOUT DOCUMENTATION?

       One of the strengths of PDL is its on-line documentation. The aim  is  to  use  this  system  to  provide
       information  on  how/if  a  routine  supports  bad  values:  in  many  cases  "pp_def()" contains all the
       information anyway, so the function-writer doesn't need to do anything at all! For the cases when this is
       not sufficient, there's the "BadDoc" option. For code written at the Perl level - i.e. in a  .pm  file  -
       use the "=for bad" pod directive.

       This  information  will  be  available  via man/pod2man/html documentation. It's also accessible from the
       "perldl" or "pdl2" shells - using the "badinfo" command - and the "pdldoc" shell command - using the "-b"
       option.

       This support is at a very early stage - i.e. not much thought has gone into  it:  comments  are  welcome;
       improvements  to  the code preferred ;) One awkward problem is for *.pm code: you have to write a *.pm.PL
       file which only inserts the "=for bad" directive (+ text) if bad value support is compiled in.  In  fact,
       this  is  a  pain when handling bad values at the Perl, rather than PDL::PP, level: perhaps I should just
       scrap the "WITH_BADVAL" option...

CURRENT ISSUES

       There are a number of areas that need work, user input, or both!  They are mentioned  elsewhere  in  this
       document, but this is just to make sure they don't get lost.

   Trapping invalid mathematical operations
       Should  we  add  exceptions  to  the functions in "PDL::Ops" to set the output bad for out-of-range input
       values?

        pdl> p log10(pdl(10,100,-1))

       I would like the above to produce "[1 2 BAD]", but this would slow down operations on  all  piddles.   We
       could check for "NaN"/"Inf" values after the operation, but I doubt that would be any faster.

   Integration with NaN
       When "BADVAL_USENAN" is true, the routines in "PDL::Ops" should just fall through to the "Code" section -
       i.e. don't use "BadCode" - for "float" and "double" data types.

   Global versus per-piddle bad values
       I  think all that's needed is to change the routines in "Basic/Core/pdlconv.c.PL", although there's bound
       to be complications.  It would also mean that the pdl structure would need to have a  variable  to  store
       its  bad  value,  which  would  mean  binary incompatibility with previous versions of PDL with bad value
       support.

       As of 17 March 2006, PDL contains  the  experimental  "BADVAL_PER_PDL"  configuration  option  which,  if
       selected, adds per-piddle bad values.

   Dataflow of the badflag
       Currently  changes  to  the  bad flag are propagated to the children of a piddle, but perhaps they should
       also be passed on to the parents as well. With the advent of per-piddle bad values we  need  to  consider
       how to handle changes to the value used to represent bad items too.

EVERYTHING ELSE

       The build process has been affected. The following files are now created during the build:

         Basic/Core/pdlcore.h      pdlcore.h.PL
                    pdlcore.c      pdlcore.c.PL
                    pdlapi.c       pdlapi.c.PL
                    Core.xs        Core.xs.PL
                    Core.pm        Core.pm.PL

       Several new files have been added:

         Basic/Pod/BadValues.pod (i.e. this file)

         t/bad.t

         Basic/Bad/
         Basic/Bad/Makefile.PL
                   bad.pd

       etc

TODO/SUGGESTIONS

       •   Look  at  using  per-piddle  bad  values.   Would  mean  a  change  to the pdl structure (i.e. binary
           incompatibility) and the routines in "Basic/Core/pdlconv.c.PL" would need changing  to  handle  this.
           Most other routines should not need to be changed ...

           See the experimental "BADVAL_PER_PDL" option.

       •   what to do about "$b = pdl(-2); $a = log10($b)" - $a should be set bad, but it currently isn't.

       •   Allow  the  operations in PDL::Ops to skip the check for bad values when using NaN as a bad value and
           processing a floating-point piddle.  Needs a fair bit of work to PDL::PP::PDLCode.

       •   "$pdl->baddata()" now updates all the children of this piddle as well. However, not sure what  to  do
           with parents, since:

             $b = $a->slice();
             $b->baddata(0)

           doesn't mean that $a shouldn't have its badvalue cleared.  however, after

             $b->baddata(1)

           it's sensible to assume that the parents now get flagged as containing bad values.

           PERHAPS  you  can  only clear the bad value flag if you are NOT a child of another piddle, whereas if
           you set the flag then all children AND parents should be set as well?

           Similarly, if you change the bad value in a piddle, should this be propagated to parent  &  children?
           Or should you only be able to do this on the 'top-level' piddle? Nasty...

       •   get  some  code  set  up to do benchmarks to see how much things are slowed down (and to check that I
           haven't messed things up if "WITH_BADVAL" is 0/undef).

       •   some of the names aren't appealing  -  I'm  thinking  of  "orig_badvalue()"  in  Basic/Bad/bad.pd  in
           particular. Any suggestions appreciated.

AUTHOR

       Copyright (C) Doug Burke (djburke@cpan.org), 2000, 2006.

       The per-piddle bad value support is by Heiko Klein (2006).

       Commercial reproduction of this documentation in a different format is forbidden.

perl v5.18.2                                       2013-09-21                                      BADVALUES(1p)