Difference between revisions of "ApCoCoA-1:BBSGen.BBFinder"
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− | <short_description>: | + | <short_description>:Let LF be a list of indeterminates from the ring K[t[k,l,i,j]] \subset XX. This function finds the polynomials and their degree that correspond to the elements of the list LF. |
</short_description> | </short_description> |
Revision as of 22:31, 14 June 2012
BBSGen.BBFinder
- Let LF be a list of indeterminates from the ring K[t[k,l,i,j]] \subset XX. This function finds the polynomials and their degree that correspond to the elements of the list LF.
Syntax
BBSGen.BBFinder(LF,OO,N,Poly); BBSGen.BBFinder(LF:LIST,OO:LIST,BO:LIST,N:INTEGER,W:MATRIX):LIST
Description
In order to use this function, one should define the ring XX as given in the example.
This function may not work properly for bigger order ideals and rings with more than three indeterminates, since the indeterminates of the ring XX also grows rapidly with respect to them.
The functions <commandref>BB.Border</commandref> and <commandref>BB.Box</commandref> are from the package borderbasis.
@param List of t[k,l,i,j] , order ideal OO, border BO, N the number of indeterminates of the polynomial ring K[x_1,...,x_N] and the Weight Matrix(see BBSGen.Wmat).
@return List of generators of the vanishing ideal of the border basis, their position in the matrix [A_k,A_l] and their degree wrt. arrow grading (see BBSGen.Wmat).
Example
Use R::=QQ[x[1..2]]; OO:=$apcocoa/borderbasis.Box([1,1]); BO:=$apcocoa/borderbasis.Border(OO); Mu:=Len(OO); Nu:=Len(BO); N:=Len(Indets()); W:=BBSGen.Wmat(OO,BO,N); Use XX::=QQ[c[1..Mu,1..Nu],t[1..N,1..N,1..Mu,1..Mu]]; BBSGen.BBFinder([t[1,2,3,4],t[1,2,2,4]],OO,BO,N,W); [ [ [ R :: Vector(1, 2)], [t[1,2,3,4]], [ -c[2,4]c[3,1] + c[3,2]c[3,3] + c[3,4]c[4,3] - c[3,3]c[4,4] + c[1,3]]], [[ R :: Vector(2, 1)], [ t[1,2,2,4]], [ -c[2,1]c[2,4] + c[2,2]c[3,3] + c[2,4]c[4,3] - c[2,3]c[4,4] - c[1,4]]]]