Natural Cubic Spline Interpolation

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Omer Saglam
Omer Saglam el 8 de Jun. de 2020
Comentada: Rena Berman el 12 de Oct. de 2020
Natural Cubic Spline Interpolation
Choose x0, x1, x2, x3 and y0, y1, y2, y3. Write an .m file to compute the third order polynomials for the intervals [x0, x1], [x1, x2], [x2, x3]. Plot the functions and the points xi, yi on the same figure. Figure should clearly show that the polynomials pass through the points.
I will choose my own xi, yi and test your code
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John D'Errico
John D'Errico el 10 de Jun. de 2020
What do I think of that solution? It reminds me vaguely of a comic that I recall hanging on every office wall, in every breakroom where I worked and went to school.
It showed two scientists discussing some scribbles on a blackboard. A theorem perhaps. But in the middle of those scribbles with the derivation is a cloud that contains the words "and then a miracle occurs".
Effectively, your solution of a cubic spline also requires a miracle. The flow chart before and after that seems not unreasonable. Some things probably need to be filled out. But it is that miraculous cloudy part that will be the hang up.
Rena Berman
Rena Berman el 12 de Oct. de 2020
(Answers Dev) Restored edit

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Ameer Hamza
Ameer Hamza el 8 de Jun. de 2020
Editada: Ameer Hamza el 8 de Jun. de 2020
See interp1(): https://www.mathworks.com/help/releases/R2020a/matlab/ref/interp1.html with 'pchip', or 'spline' methods.
For natural cubic spline, see this answer: https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/387177-plot-natural-cubic-spline#answer_309106, using csape function.

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