/* * Copyright 2008-2012 NVIDIA Corporation * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ /*! \file adjacent_difference.h * \brief Compute difference between consecutive elements of a range */ #pragma once #include #include namespace thrust { /*! \addtogroup transformations Transformations * \{ */ /*! \p adjacent_difference calculates the differences of adjacent elements in the * range [first, last). That is, \*first is assigned to * \*result, and, for each iterator \p i in the range * [first + 1, last), the difference of \*i and *(i - 1) * is assigned to \*(result + (i - first)). * * This version of \p adjacent_difference uses operator- to calculate * differences. * * The algorithm's execution is parallelized as determined by \p exec. * * \param exec The execution policy to use for parallelization. * \param first The beginning of the input range. * \param last The end of the input range. * \param result The beginning of the output range. * \return The iterator result + (last - first) * * \tparam DerivedPolicy The name of the derived execution policy. * \tparam InputIterator is a model of Input Iterator, * and \c x and \c y are objects of \p InputIterator's \c value_type, then \c x - \c is defined, * and \p InputIterator's \c value_type is convertible to a type in \p OutputIterator's set of \c value_types, * and the return type of x - y is convertible to a type in \p OutputIterator's set of \c value_types. * \tparam OutputIterator is a model of Output Iterator. * * \remark Note that \p result is permitted to be the same iterator as \p first. This is * useful for computing differences "in place". * * The following code snippet demonstrates how to use \p adjacent_difference to compute * the difference between adjacent elements of a range using the \p thrust::device execution policy: * * \code * #include * #include * #include * ... * int h_data[8] = {1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2}; * thrust::device_vector d_data(h_data, h_data + 8); * thrust::device_vector d_result(8); * * thrust::adjacent_difference(thrust::device, d_data.begin(), d_data.end(), d_result.begin()); * * // d_result is now [1, 1, -1, 1, -1, 1, -1, 1] * \endcode * * \see http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/adjacent_difference.html * \see inclusive_scan */ template OutputIterator adjacent_difference(const thrust::detail::execution_policy_base &exec, InputIterator first, InputIterator last, OutputIterator result); /*! \p adjacent_difference calculates the differences of adjacent elements in the * range [first, last). That is, *first is assigned to * \*result, and, for each iterator \p i in the range * [first + 1, last), binary_op(\*i, \*(i - 1)) is assigned to * \*(result + (i - first)). * * This version of \p adjacent_difference uses the binary function \p binary_op to * calculate differences. * * The algorithm's execution is parallelized as determined by \p exec. * * \param exec The execution policy to use for parallelization. * \param first The beginning of the input range. * \param last The end of the input range. * \param result The beginning of the output range. * \param binary_op The binary function used to compute differences. * \return The iterator result + (last - first) * * \tparam DerivedPolicy The name of the derived execution policy. * \tparam InputIterator is a model of Input Iterator, * and \p InputIterator's \c value_type is convertible to \p BinaryFunction's \c first_argument_type and \c second_argument_type, * and \p InputIterator's \c value_type is convertible to a type in \p OutputIterator's set of \c value_types. * \tparam OutputIterator is a model of Output Iterator. * \tparam BinaryFunction's \c result_type is convertible to a type in \p OutputIterator's set of \c value_types. * * \remark Note that \p result is permitted to be the same iterator as \p first. This is * useful for computing differences "in place". * * The following code snippet demonstrates how to use \p adjacent_difference to compute * the sum between adjacent elements of a range using the \p thrust::device execution policy: * * \code * #include * #include * #include * #include * ... * int h_data[8] = {1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2}; * thrust::device_vector d_data(h_data, h_data + 8); * thrust::device_vector d_result(8); * * thrust::adjacent_difference(thrust::device, d_data.begin(), d_data.end(), d_result.begin(), thrust::plus()); * * // d_data is now [1, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3] * \endcode * * \see http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/adjacent_difference.html * \see inclusive_scan */ template OutputIterator adjacent_difference(const thrust::detail::execution_policy_base &exec, InputIterator first, InputIterator last, OutputIterator result, BinaryFunction binary_op); /*! \p adjacent_difference calculates the differences of adjacent elements in the * range [first, last). That is, \*first is assigned to * \*result, and, for each iterator \p i in the range * [first + 1, last), the difference of \*i and *(i - 1) * is assigned to \*(result + (i - first)). * * This version of \p adjacent_difference uses operator- to calculate * differences. * * \param first The beginning of the input range. * \param last The end of the input range. * \param result The beginning of the output range. * \return The iterator result + (last - first) * * \tparam InputIterator is a model of Input Iterator, * and \c x and \c y are objects of \p InputIterator's \c value_type, then \c x - \c is defined, * and \p InputIterator's \c value_type is convertible to a type in \p OutputIterator's set of \c value_types, * and the return type of x - y is convertible to a type in \p OutputIterator's set of \c value_types. * \tparam OutputIterator is a model of Output Iterator. * * \remark Note that \p result is permitted to be the same iterator as \p first. This is * useful for computing differences "in place". * * The following code snippet demonstrates how to use \p adjacent_difference to compute * the difference between adjacent elements of a range. * * \code * #include * #include * ... * int h_data[8] = {1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2}; * thrust::device_vector d_data(h_data, h_data + 8); * thrust::device_vector d_result(8); * * thrust::adjacent_difference(d_data.begin(), d_data.end(), d_result.begin()); * * // d_result is now [1, 1, -1, 1, -1, 1, -1, 1] * \endcode * * \see http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/adjacent_difference.html * \see inclusive_scan */ template OutputIterator adjacent_difference(InputIterator first, InputIterator last, OutputIterator result); /*! \p adjacent_difference calculates the differences of adjacent elements in the * range [first, last). That is, *first is assigned to * \*result, and, for each iterator \p i in the range * [first + 1, last), binary_op(\*i, \*(i - 1)) is assigned to * \*(result + (i - first)). * * This version of \p adjacent_difference uses the binary function \p binary_op to * calculate differences. * * \param first The beginning of the input range. * \param last The end of the input range. * \param result The beginning of the output range. * \param binary_op The binary function used to compute differences. * \return The iterator result + (last - first) * * \tparam InputIterator is a model of Input Iterator, * and \p InputIterator's \c value_type is convertible to \p BinaryFunction's \c first_argument_type and \c second_argument_type, * and \p InputIterator's \c value_type is convertible to a type in \p OutputIterator's set of \c value_types. * \tparam OutputIterator is a model of Output Iterator. * \tparam BinaryFunction's \c result_type is convertible to a type in \p OutputIterator's set of \c value_types. * * \remark Note that \p result is permitted to be the same iterator as \p first. This is * useful for computing differences "in place". * * The following code snippet demonstrates how to use \p adjacent_difference to compute * the sum between adjacent elements of a range. * * \code * #include * #include * #include * ... * int h_data[8] = {1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2}; * thrust::device_vector d_data(h_data, h_data + 8); * thrust::device_vector d_result(8); * * thrust::adjacent_difference(d_data.begin(), d_data.end(), d_result.begin(), thrust::plus()); * * // d_data is now [1, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3] * \endcode * * \see http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/adjacent_difference.html * \see inclusive_scan */ template OutputIterator adjacent_difference(InputIterator first, InputIterator last, OutputIterator result, BinaryFunction binary_op); /*! \} */ } // end namespace thrust #include