Learn R Programming

stats (version 3.4.0)

integrate: Integration of One-Dimensional Functions

Description

Adaptive quadrature of functions of one variable over a finite or infinite interval.

Usage

integrate(f, lower, upper, …, subdivisions = 100L,
          rel.tol = .Machine$double.eps^0.25, abs.tol = rel.tol,
          stop.on.error = TRUE, keep.xy = FALSE, aux = NULL)

Arguments

f
an R function taking a numeric first argument and returning a numeric vector of the same length. Returning a non-finite element will generate an error.
lower, upper
the limits of integration. Can be infinite.
additional arguments to be passed to f.
subdivisions
the maximum number of subintervals.
rel.tol
relative accuracy requested.
abs.tol
absolute accuracy requested.
stop.on.error
logical. If true (the default) an error stops the function. If false some errors will give a result with a warning in the message component.
keep.xy
unused. For compatibility with S.
aux
unused. For compatibility with S.

Value

A list of class "integrate" with components
value
the final estimate of the integral.
abs.error
estimate of the modulus of the absolute error.
subdivisions
the number of subintervals produced in the subdivision process.
message
"OK" or a character string giving the error message.
call
the matched call.

Details

Note that arguments after must be matched exactly. If one or both limits are infinite, the infinite range is mapped onto a finite interval. For a finite interval, globally adaptive interval subdivision is used in connection with extrapolation by Wynn's Epsilon algorithm, with the basic step being Gauss--Kronrod quadrature. rel.tol cannot be less than max(50*.Machine$double.eps, 0.5e-28) if abs.tol <= 0. In R versions \(\le\) 3.2.x, the first entries of lower and upper were used whereas an error is signalled now if they are not of length one.

References

R. Piessens, E. deDoncker--Kapenga, C. Uberhuber, D. Kahaner (1983) Quadpack: a Subroutine Package for Automatic Integration; Springer Verlag.

Examples

Run this code
integrate(dnorm, -1.96, 1.96)
integrate(dnorm, -Inf, Inf)

## a slowly-convergent integral
integrand <- function(x) {1/((x+1)*sqrt(x))}
integrate(integrand, lower = 0, upper = Inf)

## don't do this if you really want the integral from 0 to Inf
integrate(integrand, lower = 0, upper = 10)
integrate(integrand, lower = 0, upper = 100000)
integrate(integrand, lower = 0, upper = 1000000, stop.on.error = FALSE)

## some functions do not handle vector input properly
f <- function(x) 2.0
try(integrate(f, 0, 1))
integrate(Vectorize(f), 0, 1)  ## correct
integrate(function(x) rep(2.0, length(x)), 0, 1)  ## correct

## integrate can fail if misused
integrate(dnorm, 0, 2)
integrate(dnorm, 0, 20)
integrate(dnorm, 0, 200)
integrate(dnorm, 0, 2000)
integrate(dnorm, 0, 20000) ## fails on many systems
integrate(dnorm, 0, Inf)   ## works

integrate(dnorm, 0:1, 20) #-> error!
## "silently" gave  integrate(dnorm, 0, 20)  in earlier versions of R

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab