public interface StepHandler
The ODE integrators compute the evolution of the state vector at some grid points that depend on their own internal algorithm. Once they have found a new grid point (possibly after having computed several evaluation of the derivative at intermediate points), they provide it to objects implementing this interface. These objects typically either ignore the intermediate steps and wait for the last one, store the points in an ephemeris, or forward them to specialized processing or output methods.
FirstOrderIntegrator
,
SecondOrderIntegrator
,
StepInterpolator
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
void |
handleStep(StepInterpolator interpolator,
boolean isLast)
Handle the last accepted step
|
boolean |
requiresDenseOutput()
Determines whether this handler needs dense output.
|
void |
reset()
Reset the step handler.
|
boolean requiresDenseOutput()
This method allows the integrator to avoid performing extra
computation if the handler does not need dense output. If this
method returns false, the integrator will call the handleStep(org.apache.commons.math.ode.sampling.StepInterpolator, boolean)
method with a DummyStepInterpolator
rather
than a custom interpolator.
void reset()
void handleStep(StepInterpolator interpolator, boolean isLast) throws DerivativeException
interpolator
- interpolator for the last accepted step. For
efficiency purposes, the various integrators reuse the same
object on each call, so if the instance wants to keep it across
all calls (for example to provide at the end of the integration a
continuous model valid throughout the integration range, as the
ContinuousOutputModel
class does), it should build a local copy
using the clone method of the interpolator and store this copy.
Keeping only a reference to the interpolator and reusing it will
result in unpredictable behavior (potentially crashing the application).isLast
- true if the step is the last oneDerivativeException
- if user code called from step interpolator
finalization triggers oneCopyright © 2010 - 2020 Adobe. All Rights Reserved