The numerical methods employed in the solution of many scientific computing problems require the computation of derivatives of a function I : R" ~ Rm. Both the accuracy and the computational requirements of the derivative computation are usually of critical importance for the robustness and speed of the numerical solution. Automatic Differentiation of FORtran (ADIFOR) is a source transformation tool that accepts Fortran 77 code for the computation of a function and writes portable Fortran 77 code for the computation of the derivatives. In contrast to previous approaches, ADIFOR views automatic differentiation as a source transformation problem. ADIFOR employs the data analysis capabilities of the ParaScope Parallel Programming Environment, which enable us to handle arbitrary Fortran 77 codes and to exploit the computational context in the computation of derivatives. Experimental results show that ADIFOR can handle real-life codes and that ADIFOR-generated codes are competitive with divided-difference approximations of derivatives. In addition, studies suggest that the source transformation approach to automatic differentiation may improve the time to compute derivatives by orders of magnitude.
We describe algorithms for computing the greatest common divisor GCD of two univariate polynomials with inexactlyknown coe cients. Assuming that an estimate for the GCD degree is available e.g., using an SVD-based algorithm, we formulate and solve a nonlinear optimization problem in order to determine the coe cients of the best" GCD. We discuss various issues related to the implementation of the algorithms and present some preliminary test results.
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