PDL(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | PDL(3pm) |
PDL - the Perl Data Language
(For the exported PDL constructor, pdl(), see PDL::Core)
PDL is the Perl Data Language, a perl extension that is designed for scientific and bulk numeric data processing and display. It extends perl's syntax and includes fully vectorized, multidimensional array handling, plus several paths for device-independent graphics output.
PDL is fast, comparable and often outperforming IDL and MATLAB in real world applications. PDL allows large N-dimensional data sets such as large images, spectra, etc to be stored efficiently and manipulated quickly.
For a description of the vectorization (also called "broadcasting"), see PDL::Core.
The PDL package includes an interactive shell. You can learn about it, run "perldoc perldl", or run the shell "perldl" or "pdl2" and type "help".
If you want to search for a function name, you should use the PDL shell along with the "help" or "apropos" command (to do a fuzzy search). For example:
pdl> apropos xval xlinvals X axis values between endpoints (see xvals). xlogvals X axis values logarithmicly spaced... xvals Fills an ndarray with X index values... yvals Fills an ndarray with Y index values. See the CAVEAT for xvals. zvals Fills an ndarray with Z index values. See the CAVEAT for xvals.
To learn more about the PDL shell, see perldl or pdl2.
Most PDL documentation describes the language features. The number of PDL pages is too great to list here. The following pages offer some guidance to help you find the documentation you need.
PDL comes with support for most native numeric data types available in C. 2.027 added support for C99 complex numbers. See PDL::Core, PDL::Ops and PDL::Math for details on usage and behaviour.
PDL includes about a dozen perl modules that form the core of the language, plus additional modules that add further functionality. The perl module "PDL" loads all of the core modules automatically, making their functions available in the current perl namespace. Some notes:
use PDL; # Is equivalent to the following: use PDL::Core; use PDL::Ops; use PDL::Primitive; use PDL::Ufunc; use PDL::Basic; use PDL::Slices; use PDL::Bad; use PDL::MatrixOps; use PDL::Math; use PDL::IO::Misc; use PDL::IO::FITS; use PDL::IO::Pic; use PDL::IO::Storable; use PDL::Lvalue;
2023-04-27 | perl v5.36.0 |