(35S) Statistical Distributions Functions
|
10-28-2015, 12:24 AM
Post: #21
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-27-2015 10:25 PM)Dieter Wrote:(10-27-2015 07:32 PM)Dieter Wrote: BTW, at the moment I am looking at an 35s implementation of the HP67 routines. Dieter, the program works perfect!. Please include the function for the inverse, no mather how long it takes |
|||
10-28-2015, 12:36 AM
(This post was last modified: 10-28-2015 12:38 AM by PedroLeiva.)
Post: #22
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-28-2015 12:11 AM)Thomas Klemm Wrote:(10-27-2015 11:41 PM)PedroLeiva Wrote: 2° time: x=0.5, y=3.850 E-7; variable X= 0.001 Thomas, I erase the STOP instruction, and corrected for "I018 GTO I007" so the program began to work perfect. Thank you |
|||
10-28-2015, 01:05 AM
Post: #23
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions | |||
10-28-2015, 01:40 AM
Post: #24
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-28-2015 12:36 AM)PedroLeiva Wrote: I erase the STOP instruction, and corrected for "I018 GTO I007" so the program began to work perfect. That was probably the most distant remote debugging session I ever had. I've added line I005 to improve the initial guess only after writing the listing of the program. This shifted all the following commands down one line. And then I forgot to update the GTO command in the listing. We all know that the Go To Statement is Considered Harmful. Did we really need another proof? Cheers Thomas |
|||
10-28-2015, 11:55 AM
(This post was last modified: 10-28-2015 12:07 PM by Dieter.)
Post: #25
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-28-2015 01:05 AM)Thomas Klemm Wrote: Or then you can just use the built-in solver. A dedicated solver is more effective and requires just one initial guess. ;-) But maybe it is possible to give a lower and higher limit for the quantile and feed this to the solver. For all four distributions, that is. With some slight tweaks (e.g. exit if a certain accuracy level is reached since the CDF is not absolutely exact anyway) this might work as well. EDIT: the built-in solver probably will not work here. It is known that the 35s hat problems when solving programs containing loops. So a dedicated solver seems to be the only solution. Dieter |
|||
10-28-2015, 12:34 PM
(This post was last modified: 10-28-2015 12:58 PM by Dieter.)
Post: #26
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-28-2015 12:24 AM)PedroLeiva Wrote: Dieter, the program works perfect!. Please include the function for the inverse, no mather how long it takes OK, here is a first version with a rough initial guess. At the X=? prompt simply enter a negative value if you want to compute the quantile for that probabily. If you already have entered the previous C program, simply add lines C010 and C011 and continue with line C054. Code: C001 LBL C Usage: At the X=? prompt enter the negative probability for which you want the Chi² quantile. The program will then display two estimates in Y and X (the previous and the current), so that you can see the iteration converge. Pressing R/S yields the next approximation. Code: [XEQ] C [ENTER] J=? If 18,307 is sufficiently accurate you may stop here. Otherwise continue: Code: [R/S] 18,307038039 When the two approximations are displayed you may also enter your own guess before pressing R/S, and the approximation will continue with this value. NB: This program is not very sophisticated, and it does not match what's inside the 34s. For instance, the latter evaluates CDFs for large x via P(x) = 1–Q(x), and also the quantile function has a much, much better initial guess. It took me quite a while to get the guess within <10% of the true value. ;-) For instance, the first guess for the case above is 18,2..., compared to the exact value 18,307... Some time ago I wrote 35s/41C programs for the Normal distribution. They evaluate the PDF, one- and two-sided CDFs and also one- and two-sided quantiles with several tweaks to ensure best possible accuracy and efficiency. But these are about three times the size of the small Chi² progam posted above. Dieter |
|||
10-28-2015, 06:21 PM
Post: #27
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
I think we have tight-fitting Student t-distribution. I attached the pdf with the program that Thomas wrote, five calculation examples (test cases), an outline of the distribición and an instruction table for input and output of data.
Comments are welcome. Pedro |
|||
10-28-2015, 06:59 PM
Post: #28
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-28-2015 12:34 PM)Dieter Wrote:(10-28-2015 12:24 AM)PedroLeiva Wrote: Dieter, the program works perfect!. Please include the function for the inverse, no mather how long it takes Dieter, all perfect. I got the same figures as you!. I will prepare a PDF with programme keytroke sequence, test cases and instructions for in and output data |
|||
10-28-2015, 07:54 PM
(This post was last modified: 10-28-2015 08:00 PM by Dieter.)
Post: #29
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-28-2015 06:21 PM)PedroLeiva Wrote: I think we have tight-fitting Student t-distribution. I attached the pdf with the program that Thomas wrote, five calculation examples (test cases), an outline of the distribición and an instruction table for input and output of data. For the record, here is a version without using the Integrate function. It is based on algorithm AS 3, published as a Fortran program in Applied Statistics (1968). This version includes an improved input routine for the degrees of freedom in that it checks whether the input is a positive integer. Again, both the PDF and CDF are returned on the stack (in Y and X). Code for the inverse is not yet included. Code: T001 LBL T Here is Thomas' sample case: Code: [XEQ] T [ENTER] J=? Final remark: like the other programs discussed in this thread, this is a rather simple and straightforward implementation that works fine for most practical cases. However, far out in the distribution tails the results may lose accuracy due to rounding, and eventually values may round to 0 or 1. For instance, for 7 d.o.f. and x=–100 you will get a CDF of 2,000...E–12 while the exact result is 1,318 E–12, and for x=0 the returned result is zero while it actually is 1,69 E–17. If you want more or less exact values even for such extreme arguments, a different approach is required. Dieter |
|||
10-28-2015, 10:34 PM
Post: #30
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-28-2015 07:54 PM)Dieter Wrote:(10-28-2015 06:21 PM)PedroLeiva Wrote: I think we have tight-fitting Student t-distribution. I attached the pdf with the program that Thomas wrote, five calculation examples (test cases), an outline of the distribición and an instruction table for input and output of data. Dieter, perfect!. I will try this option also. Thanks I am preparing a compiled program pdf for Chi-Square to publish in the Forum |
|||
10-28-2015, 10:45 PM
Post: #31
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
I leave the program compilation that Dieter wrote for Chi-Square Distribution, with examples and a list of programming steps.
Much I wish you could make the attempt with F Distribution, just to complete de Statistical Distribution Functions. Remember that Normal and Inverse Distribution is already included in the HP 35s Manual! |
|||
10-29-2015, 12:09 AM
Post: #32
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-28-2015 10:45 PM)PedroLeiva Wrote: I leave the program compilation that Dieter wrote for Chi-Square Distribution, with examples and a list of programming steps. Here is the program for Normal&Inverse-Normal Distributions. Just for those who will be interested in this subject |
|||
10-29-2015, 07:01 AM
Post: #33
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-29-2015 12:09 AM)PedroLeiva Wrote: Here is the program for Normal&Inverse-Normal Distributions. Just for those who will be interested in this subject This is a sample program from the 35s manual. It works, but there is room for improvement. For instance the HP15C Advanced Functions Handbook has a nice 15C program that uses the Integrate function with variable transformation which works much better in the distribution tails. Personally, I'd prefer a different approach with the classic combination of series expansion and continued fraction to evaluate the Gauss integral. For the inverse, rational approximations with various accuracy levels can be given (yes, there is much more that Hastings' three-digit method as implemented in several HP software pacs). Maybe I will eventually post an example here. Dieter |
|||
10-29-2015, 07:18 AM
(This post was last modified: 10-29-2015 07:29 AM by Dieter.)
Post: #34
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-28-2015 10:45 PM)PedroLeiva Wrote: I leave the program compilation that Dieter wrote for Chi-Square Distribution, with examples and a list of programming steps. Looks very nice. FTR: There are special fonts available that resemble the keys and the display of various HP calculators (simple 7 segment LCD, dot matrix, 14 segment HP41, etc.). I remember a font package by Luiz Viera and there also is a zip-file at educalc.net that inclues a 33s key font. Simply search for HP calculator fonts I am not quite happy with the initial guess of the Chi² quantile. This is a very stripped down version of what's implemented in the 34s. But a more sophisticated version that usually converges within 3...5 iterations would require an estimate for the Normal quantile, which is also true for the Student inverse. So this can be done in a unified package that includes all three (or four) distributions. For the time being you may include the improved J input routine from the Student program. Dieter |
|||
10-29-2015, 11:56 PM
Post: #35
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-29-2015 07:18 AM)Dieter Wrote: I am not quite happy with the initial guess of the Chi² quantile. This is a very stripped down version of what's implemented in the 34s. But a more sophisticated version that usually converges within 3...5 iterations would require an estimate for the Normal quantile, which is also true for the Student inverse. So this can be done in a unified package that includes all three (or four) distributions. I now tried this with the Chi² and Student programs. Both calculate a quite good first guess for the quantile which is based on a simple approximation of the Normal quantile. The previous Chi² example (10 dof and p=0,95) converges after just three iterations. The initial estimate was 18,24 with 18,307 being the correct result. In most cases, both for Chi² and Student, merely 3...5 iterations will do. This approach requires one or two additional subroutine(s) for the Normal estimate, and the complete Student program (including the inverse) finally has about 200 steps. Dieter |
|||
10-30-2015, 02:36 AM
Post: #36
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-28-2015 07:54 PM)Dieter Wrote:Dear Dieter, this is your t Student program. When I tryed with Thomas examples it works perfect, and the same when I try again with HP Stat Pack.(10-28-2015 06:21 PM)PedroLeiva Wrote: I think we have tight-fitting Student t-distribution. I attached the pdf with the program that Thomas wrote, five calculation examples (test cases), an outline of the distribición and an instruction table for input and output of data. |
|||
10-30-2015, 01:56 PM
Post: #37
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-30-2015 02:36 AM)PedroLeiva Wrote: Dear Dieter, this is your t Student program. When I tryed with Thomas examples it works perfect, and the same when I try again with HP Stat Pack. There is room for improvement. I am working on an integrated solution that contains Normal, Chi² and Student's t distribution and calculates PDFs, CDFs and their inverses, the latter with a much improved initial guess. The F case is a bit more complicated, but I'll see. BTW: quoting the whole previous post really is not required. If everyone would do so, the messages got longer and longer and longer as the thread continues and you would have to scroll down for a while until you find the new content. So when replying, you should simply delete everything that you do not directly refer to. BTW2: do you have the 35s emulator? In this case I could send an .ep file that you can load into the emulator directly. This way you would not have to enter a few hundred lines of code. BTW3: does someone know if there is a way to produce a listing or something similar from programs inside the 35s emulator? Dieter |
|||
10-30-2015, 05:20 PM
Post: #38
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
[/quote]
Dieter, you are absolutely right; from now on when I quote, I will erase the above text. Sorry, it would not hapend again. I use of the Hewlett Packard HP 35s emulator, which enormously facilitates joining my work programs, and in turn I make far fewer errors. A remark about it, I wanted to send the files of the summarized previous programs in PDF, but the MoHPC system will not let me, so we should send them by email (leiva.pedro@inta.gob.ar). It would be very useful to send a text file with instructions from the emulator program, but I do not know if that is really possible. |
|||
10-30-2015, 07:16 PM
Post: #39
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
(10-30-2015 05:20 PM)PedroLeiva Wrote: Dieter, you are absolutely right; from now on when I quote, I will erase the above text. Of course not all text. Otherwise it's not a quote. ;-) (10-30-2015 05:20 PM)PedroLeiva Wrote: I use of the Hewlett Packard HP 35s emulator, which enormously facilitates joining my work programs, and in turn I make far fewer errors. So you could use a .ep file and load it via the emulator menu (Calculator > Load). I now have a collection with programs for the Normal, Student and Chi² distribution and their inverses. But there still is some work to do. (10-30-2015 05:20 PM)PedroLeiva Wrote: A remark about it, I wanted to send the files of the summarized previous programs in PDF, but the MoHPC system will not let me, ?!? – you have successfully attached several PDF files to your posts, e.g. the Chi² and Student programs. Where exactly is the problem? Dieter |
|||
10-30-2015, 07:43 PM
(This post was last modified: 10-30-2015 07:45 PM by PedroLeiva.)
Post: #40
|
|||
|
|||
RE: HP 35s Statistical Distributions Functions
?!? – you have successfully attached several PDF files to your posts, e.g. the Chi² and Student programs. Where exactly is the problem?
Dieter [/quote] My apologies, I expressed badly. The system don´t let me send the * .EP files of the emulator programs that I type while testing what you were designing. Try your self; what the system warned me is that do not accept that file format for sending. |
|||
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »
|
User(s) browsing this thread: 3 Guest(s)