301 - 310 of 421 for PlotStyleSearch Results
View search results from all Wolfram sites (4332 matches)
TukeyLambdaDistribution   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
TukeyLambdaDistribution[\[Lambda]] represents Tukey's lambda distribution with shape parameter \[Lambda].TukeyLambdaDistribution[\[Lambda], \[Mu], \[Sigma]] represents ...
Every new version of Mathematica contains many new features. But careful design from the outset has allowed nearly total compatibility to be maintained between all versions. ...
GammaDistribution   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
GammaDistribution[\[Alpha], \[Beta]] represents a gamma distribution with shape parameter \[Alpha] and scale parameter \[Beta].GammaDistribution[\[Alpha], \[Beta], \[Gamma], ...
KernelMixtureDistribution   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
KernelMixtureDistribution[{x_1, x_2, ...}] represents a kernel mixture distribution based on the data values x_i.KernelMixtureDistribution[{{x_1, y_1, ...}, {x_2, y_2, ...}, ...
PLY   (Mathematica Import/Export Format)
3D geometry format. ASCII or binary format. Used for storage and interchange of 3D graphical objects. Known as Stanford Triangle Format. PLY is an acronym derived from ...
ArrayRules   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
ArrayRules[SparseArray[...]] gives the rules {pos_1 -> val_1, pos_2 -> val_2, ...} specifying elements in a sparse array. ArrayRules[list] gives rules for SparseArray[list].
InternallyBalancedDecomposition   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
InternallyBalancedDecomposition[ss] yields the internally balanced decomposition of the StateSpaceModel object ss. The result is a list {s, ib} where s is the similarity ...
LeastSquares   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
LeastSquares[m, b] finds an x that solves the linear least-squares problem for the matrix equation m.x == b.
StepMonitor   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
StepMonitor is an option for iterative numerical computation functions that gives an expression to evaluate whenever a step is taken by the numerical method used.
Linear IVPs and BVPs   (Mathematica Tutorial)
To begin, consider an initial value problem for a linear first-order ODE. This is a linear first-order ODE. Notice that the general solution is a linear function of the ...
1 ... 28|29|30|31|32|33|34 ... 43 Previous Next

...