| Date: | Fri, 14 Apr 2006 20:08:54 -0400 |
| Reply-To: | Michael Johnston <mkjohnst@GMAIL.COM> |
| Sender: | "SAS(r) Discussion" <SAS-L@LISTSERV.UGA.EDU> |
| From: | Michael Johnston <mkjohnst@GMAIL.COM> |
| Subject: | Re: newton-rapson method |
| In-Reply-To: | <1145056628.399609.190390@g10g2000cwb.googlegroups.com> |
| Content-Type: | text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 |
Hi Tracy,
There's a pretty good introduction to IML on the web here:
http://www.rhoworld.com/pdf/ch1099.pdf
HTH,
Mike
On 4/14/06, lisiqi77@yahoo.com <lisiqi77@yahoo.com> wrote:
> WOW!!! there is so much info in this post and I think it'll take me a
> lot of time to digest all of it....
>
> And I've never used IML before and this might be a silly question--I
> don't
> quite get Mike's codes in the "coefficients" section and "p=c3 || c2 ||
> c1
> || c0" as well. and it doesn't seem to be that you multiply r*(1+r)^2
> to both sides of the equation. Would this method be very cubersome for
> a 12th-order polynomial?
>
>
> Thanks a lot,
> Tracy
>
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