[ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [ Up ] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
33.6 Stopping Parameters
A minimization procedure should stop when one of the following conditions is true:
- A minimum has been found to within the user-specified precision.
- A user-specified maximum number of iterations has been reached.
- An error has occurred.
The handling of these conditions is under user control. The function below allows the user to test the precision of the current result.
- Function: int gsl_min_test_interval (double x_lower, double x_upper, double epsabs, double epsrel)
This function tests for the convergence of the interval [x_lower, x_upper] with absolute error epsabs and relative error epsrel. The test returns
GSL_SUCCESS
if the following condition is achieved, when the interval x = [a,b] does not include the origin. If the interval includes the origin then \min(|a|,|b|) is replaced by zero (which is the minimum value of |x| over the interval). This ensures that the relative error is accurately estimated for minima close to the origin.This condition on the interval also implies that any estimate of the minimum x_m in the interval satisfies the same condition with respect to the true minimum x_m^*, assuming that the true minimum x_m^* is contained within the interval.