@push_back(tab, value)
@push_back(nim:NIM, d:numeric, y1:numeric)
@push_back(nim:NIM, d:numeric, y1:numeric, it:string)
@push_back(nim:NIM, y0:numeric, d:numeric, y1:numeric)
@push_back(nim:NIM, y0:numeric, d:numeric, y1:numeric, it:string)
@push_back(tab, value)
Usually, @push_front is sightly more efficient thant @push_back.
@push_back(nim:NIM, d:numeric, y1:numeric, it:string)
nim
.
The first argument, modified by side-effect, is the nim, which is
also the returned value.
The argument d
specifies the length of the interpolation since the
previous breakpoint, y1
is the final value attained at the end of the
breakpoint, and it
is the interpolation type. The interpolation type
can be omitted: in this case, the interpolation is linear. The initial
value y0
of the breakpoint is the y1
value of the previous
breakpoint.
@push_back(nim:NIM, y0:numeric, d:numeric, y1:numeric, it:string)
y0
is explicitly given, making
possible to specify discontinuous nim
.
See also Tab Manipulations @car, @cdr, @clear, @concat, @cons, @copy, @count, @dim, @domain, @drop, @empty, @find, @flatten, @gnuplot, @insert, @iota, @is_list, @is_prefix, @is_subsequence, @is_suffix, @lace, @last, @listify, @map, @max_val, @median, @member, @normalize, @occurs, @parse, @permute, @push_back, @push_front, @range, @reduce, @remove, @remove_duplicate, @replace, @reshape, @resize, @reverse, @rotate, @scan, @scramble, @size, @slice, @sort, @sputter, @stutter, @succession, @tab_history, @tab_history_date, @tab_history_rdate, @take @to_num
See also Nim Related Functions @aggregate, @align_breakpoints, @dim, @filter_max_t, @filter_median_t, @filter_min_t, @integrate, @linearize, @max_key, @max_val, @min, @min_key, @min_val, @projection, @push_back, @push_front, @sample, @simplify_lang_v, @simplify_radial_distance_t, @simplify_radial_distance_v, @window_filter_t