The itp package implements the Interpolate, Truncate, Project (ITP) root-finding algorithm of Oliveira and Takahashi (2021). Each iteration of the algorithm results in a bracketing interval for the root that is narrower than the previous interval. It’s performance compares favourably with existing methods on both well-behaved functions and ill-behaved functions while retaining the worst-case reliability of the bisection method. For details see the authors’ Kudos summary and the Wikipedia article ITP method.
We use three examples from Section 3 of Oliveira and Takahashi
(2021) to illustrate the use of the
itp
function. Each of these functions has a root in the interval
$(-1, 1)$. The function can be supplied either as an R function or as an
external pointer to a C++ function.
library(itp)
The Lambert function $l(x) = xe^x - 1$ is continuous.
The itp
function finds an estimate of the root, that is, $x^{\ast}$
for which $f(x^{\ast})$ is (approximately) equal to 0. The algorithm
continues until the length of the interval that brackets the root is
smaller than $2 \epsilon$, where $\epsilon$ is a user-supplied
tolerance. The default is $\epsilon = 10^{-10}$.
First, we supply an R function that evaluates the Lambert function.
# Lambert, using an R function
lambert <- function(x) x * exp(x) - 1
itp(lambert, c(-1, 1))
#> function: lambert
#> root f(root) iterations
#> 0.5671 2.048e-12 8
Now, we create an external pointer to a C++ function that has been
provided in the itp
package and pass this pointer to the function
itp()
. For more information see the Overview of the itp
package
vignette.
# Lambert, using an external pointer to a C++ function
lambert_ptr <- xptr_create("lambert")
itp(lambert_ptr, c(-1, 1))
#> function: lambert_ptr
#> root f(root) iterations
#> 0.5671 2.048e-12 8
itp_c
Also provided is the function itp_c
, which is equivalent to itp
, but
the calculations are performed entirely using C++, and the arguments
differ slightly: itp_c
has a named required argument pars
rather
than ...
and it does not have the arguments interval
, f.a
or
f.b
.
# Calling itp_c()
res <- itp_c(lambert_ptr, pars = list(), a = -1, b = 1)
res
#> function:
#> root f(root) iterations
#> 0.5671 2.048e-12 8
The staircase function $s(x) = \lceil 10 x - 1 \rceil + 1/2$ is discontinuous.
The itp
function finds the discontinuity at $x = 0$ at which the sign
of the function changes. The value of 0.5 returned for the root
res$root
is the midpoint of the bracketing interval [res$a, res$b]
at convergence.
# Staircase
staircase <- function(x) ceiling(10 * x - 1) + 1 / 2
res <- itp(staircase, c(-1, 1))
print(res, all = TRUE)
#> function: staircase
#> root f(root) iterations a b f.a
#> 7.404e-11 0.5 31 0 1.481e-10 -0.5
#> f.b precision
#> 0.5 7.404e-11
The Warsaw function $w(x) = I(x > -1)\left(1 + \sin\left(\frac{1}{1+x}\right)\right)-1$ has multiple roots.
When the initial interval is $[-1, 1]$ the itp
function finds the root
$x \approx -0.6817$. There are other roots that could be found from a
different initial interval.
# Warsaw
warsaw <- function(x) ifelse(x > -1, sin(1 / (x + 1)), -1)
itp(warsaw, c(-1, 1))
#> function: warsaw
#> root f(root) iterations
#> -0.6817 -5.472e-11 11
To get the current released version from CRAN:
install.packages("itp")
See the Overview of the itp
package
vignette, which can also be accessed using
vignette("itp-vignette", package = "itp")
.