Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Preface to the 3rd Edition
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Preliminaries
- Chapter 3 Polynomials
- Chapter 4 Polynomial Splines
- Chapter 5 Computational Methods
- Chapter 6 Approximation Power of Splines
- Chapter 7 Approximation Power of Splines (Free Knots)
- Chapter 8 Other Spaces of Polynomial Splines
- Chapter 9 Tchebycheffian Splines
- Chapter 10 L-Splines
- Chapter 11 Generalized Splines
- Chapter 12 Tensor-Product Splines
- Chapter 13 Some Multidimensional Tools
- Supplement
- References
- New References
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Preface to the 3rd Edition
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Preliminaries
- Chapter 3 Polynomials
- Chapter 4 Polynomial Splines
- Chapter 5 Computational Methods
- Chapter 6 Approximation Power of Splines
- Chapter 7 Approximation Power of Splines (Free Knots)
- Chapter 8 Other Spaces of Polynomial Splines
- Chapter 9 Tchebycheffian Splines
- Chapter 10 L-Splines
- Chapter 11 Generalized Splines
- Chapter 12 Tensor-Product Splines
- Chapter 13 Some Multidimensional Tools
- Supplement
- References
- New References
- Index
Summary
The theory of spline functions and their applications is a relatively recent development. As late as 1960, there were no more than a handful of papers mentioning spline functions by name. Today, less than 20 years later, there are well over 1000 research papers on the subject, and it remains an active research area.
The rapid development of spline functions is due primarily to their great usefulness in applications. Classes of spline functions possess many nice structural properties as well as excellent approximation powers. Since they are easy to store, evaluate, and manipulate on a digital computer, a myriad of applications in the numerical solution of a variety of problems in applied mathematics have been found. These include, for example, data fitting, function approximation, numerical quadrature, and the numerical solution of operator equations such as those associated with ordinary and partial differential equations, integral equations, optimal control problems, and so on. Programs based on spline functions have found their way into virtually every computing library.
It appears that the most turbulent years in the development of splines are over, and it is now generally agreed that they will become a firmly entrenched part of approximation theory and numerical analysis. Thus my aim here is to present a fairly complete and unified treatment of spline functions, which, I hope, will prove to be a useful source of information for approximation theorists, numerical analysts, scientists, and engineers.
This book developed out of a set of lecture notes which I began preparing in the fall of 1970 for a course on spline functions at the University of Texas at Austin.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Spline Functions: Basic Theory , pp. xi - xivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007