ctftri (3) - Linux Manuals

NAME

ctftri.f -

SYNOPSIS


Functions/Subroutines


subroutine ctftri (TRANSR, UPLO, DIAG, N, A, INFO)
CTFTRI

Function/Subroutine Documentation

subroutine ctftri (characterTRANSR, characterUPLO, characterDIAG, integerN, complex, dimension( 0: * )A, integerINFO)

CTFTRI

Purpose:

 CTFTRI computes the inverse of a triangular matrix A stored in RFP
 format.

 This is a Level 3 BLAS version of the algorithm.


 

Parameters:

TRANSR

          TRANSR is CHARACTER*1
          = 'N':  The Normal TRANSR of RFP A is stored;
          = 'C':  The Conjugate-transpose TRANSR of RFP A is stored.


UPLO

          UPLO is CHARACTER*1
          = 'U':  A is upper triangular;
          = 'L':  A is lower triangular.


DIAG

          DIAG is CHARACTER*1
          = 'N':  A is non-unit triangular;
          = 'U':  A is unit triangular.


N

          N is INTEGER
          The order of the matrix A.  N >= 0.


A

          A is COMPLEX array, dimension ( N*(N+1)/2 );
          On entry, the triangular matrix A in RFP format. RFP format
          is described by TRANSR, UPLO, and N as follows: If TRANSR =
          'N' then RFP A is (0:N,0:k-1) when N is even; k=N/2. RFP A is
          (0:N-1,0:k) when N is odd; k=N/2. IF TRANSR = 'C' then RFP is
          the Conjugate-transpose of RFP A as defined when
          TRANSR = 'N'. The contents of RFP A are defined by UPLO as
          follows: If UPLO = 'U' the RFP A contains the nt elements of
          upper packed A; If UPLO = 'L' the RFP A contains the nt
          elements of lower packed A. The LDA of RFP A is (N+1)/2 when
          TRANSR = 'C'. When TRANSR is 'N' the LDA is N+1 when N is
          even and N is odd. See the Note below for more details.

          On exit, the (triangular) inverse of the original matrix, in
          the same storage format.


INFO

          INFO is INTEGER
          = 0: successful exit
          < 0: if INFO = -i, the i-th argument had an illegal value
          > 0: if INFO = i, A(i,i) is exactly zero.  The triangular
               matrix is singular and its inverse can not be computed.


 

Author:

Univ. of Tennessee

Univ. of California Berkeley

Univ. of Colorado Denver

NAG Ltd.

Date:

November 2011

Further Details:

  We first consider Standard Packed Format when N is even.
  We give an example where N = 6.

      AP is Upper             AP is Lower

   00 01 02 03 04 05       00
      11 12 13 14 15       10 11
         22 23 24 25       20 21 22
            33 34 35       30 31 32 33
               44 45       40 41 42 43 44
                  55       50 51 52 53 54 55


  Let TRANSR = 'N'. RFP holds AP as follows:
  For UPLO = 'U' the upper trapezoid A(0:5,0:2) consists of the last
  three columns of AP upper. The lower triangle A(4:6,0:2) consists of
  conjugate-transpose of the first three columns of AP upper.
  For UPLO = 'L' the lower trapezoid A(1:6,0:2) consists of the first
  three columns of AP lower. The upper triangle A(0:2,0:2) consists of
  conjugate-transpose of the last three columns of AP lower.
  To denote conjugate we place -- above the element. This covers the
  case N even and TRANSR = 'N'.

         RFP A                   RFP A

                                -- -- --
        03 04 05                33 43 53
                                   -- --
        13 14 15                00 44 54
                                      --
        23 24 25                10 11 55

        33 34 35                20 21 22
        --
        00 44 45                30 31 32
        -- --
        01 11 55                40 41 42
        -- -- --
        02 12 22                50 51 52

  Now let TRANSR = 'C'. RFP A in both UPLO cases is just the conjugate-
  transpose of RFP A above. One therefore gets:


           RFP A                   RFP A

     -- -- -- --                -- -- -- -- -- --
     03 13 23 33 00 01 02    33 00 10 20 30 40 50
     -- -- -- -- --                -- -- -- -- --
     04 14 24 34 44 11 12    43 44 11 21 31 41 51
     -- -- -- -- -- --                -- -- -- --
     05 15 25 35 45 55 22    53 54 55 22 32 42 52


  We next  consider Standard Packed Format when N is odd.
  We give an example where N = 5.

     AP is Upper                 AP is Lower

   00 01 02 03 04              00
      11 12 13 14              10 11
         22 23 24              20 21 22
            33 34              30 31 32 33
               44              40 41 42 43 44


  Let TRANSR = 'N'. RFP holds AP as follows:
  For UPLO = 'U' the upper trapezoid A(0:4,0:2) consists of the last
  three columns of AP upper. The lower triangle A(3:4,0:1) consists of
  conjugate-transpose of the first two   columns of AP upper.
  For UPLO = 'L' the lower trapezoid A(0:4,0:2) consists of the first
  three columns of AP lower. The upper triangle A(0:1,1:2) consists of
  conjugate-transpose of the last two   columns of AP lower.
  To denote conjugate we place -- above the element. This covers the
  case N odd  and TRANSR = 'N'.

         RFP A                   RFP A

                                   -- --
        02 03 04                00 33 43
                                      --
        12 13 14                10 11 44

        22 23 24                20 21 22
        --
        00 33 34                30 31 32
        -- --
        01 11 44                40 41 42

  Now let TRANSR = 'C'. RFP A in both UPLO cases is just the conjugate-
  transpose of RFP A above. One therefore gets:


           RFP A                   RFP A

     -- -- --                   -- -- -- -- -- --
     02 12 22 00 01             00 10 20 30 40 50
     -- -- -- --                   -- -- -- -- --
     03 13 23 33 11             33 11 21 31 41 51
     -- -- -- -- --                   -- -- -- --
     04 14 24 34 44             43 44 22 32 42 52


 

Definition at line 222 of file ctftri.f.

Author

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