DADiSP

DADiSP
Developer(s) DSP Development Corporation
Initial release 1987 (1987)
Stable release DADiSP 6.7 B01 / October 29, 2015 (2015-10-29)
Development status Active
Written in C, C++, SPL
Operating system Microsoft Windows
Platform IA-32, x86-64
Type Technical computing
License Proprietary commercial software
Website DADiSP
SPL
Paradigm multi-paradigm: imperative, procedural, object-oriented, array
Designed by Randy Race
Developer DSP Development Corporation
First appeared late 1990s
Stable release 6.7 / 2015
Typing discipline dynamic, weak
OS Microsoft Windows
Filename extensions .spl
Influenced by
APL, C, C++

DADiSP (Data Analysis and Display, pronounced day-disp) is a numerical computing environment developed by DSP Development Corporation which allows one to display and manipulate data series, matrices and images with an interface similar to a spreadsheet. DADiSP is used in the study of signal processing,[1] numerical analysis, statistical and physiological data processing.[2]

Interface

DADiSP is designed to perform technical data analysis in a spreadsheet like environment. However, unlike a typical business spreadsheet that operates on a table of cells each of which contain single scalar values, a DADiSP Worksheet consists of multiple interrelated windows where each window contains an entire series or multi-column matrix. A window not only stores the data, but also displays the data in several interactive forms, including 2D graphs, XYZ plots, 3D surfaces, images and numeric tables. Like a traditional spreadsheet, the windows are linked such that a change to the data in one window automatically updates all dependent windows both numerically and graphically.[3][4] Users manipulate data primarily through windows. A DADiSP window is normally referred to by the letter "W" followed by a window number, as in "W1". For example, the formula W1: 1..3 assigns the series values {1, 2, 3} to "W1". The formula W2: W1*W1 sets a second window to compute the square of each value in "W1" such that "W2" will contain the series {1, 4, 9}. If the values of "W1" change to {3, 5, 2, 4}, the values of "W2" automatically update to {9, 25, 4, 16}.

Programming language

DADiSP includes a series based programming language called SPL (Series Processing Language)[5] used to implement custom algorithms. SPL has a C/C++ like syntax and is incrementally compiled into intermediate bytecode, which is executed by a virtual machine. SPL supports both standard variables assigned with = and "hot" variables assigned with :=. For example, the statement A = 1..3 assigns the series {1, 2, 3} to the standard variable "A". The square of the values can be assigned with B = A * A. Variable "B" contains the series {1, 3, 9}. If "A" changes, "B" does not change because "B" preserves the values as assigned without regard to the future state of "A". However, the statement A := 1..3 creates a "hot" variable. A hot variable is analogous to a window, except hot variables do not display their data. The assignment B := A * A computes the square of the values of "A" as before, but now if "A" changes, "B" automatically updates. Setting A = {3, 5, 2, 4} causes "B" to automatically update with {9, 25, 4, 16}.

History

DADiSP was originally developed in the early 1980s as part of a research project at MIT to explore the aerodynamics of Formula One racing cars.[4] The original goal of the project was to enable researchers to quickly explore data analysis algorithms without the need for traditional programming.

Version history

See also

References

  1. ↑ Mahmood Nahvi. "Real-Time Digital Signal Processing Design Projects in an Undergraduate DSP Course and Laboratory" (PDF). Texas Instruments DSPS Fest, 1999.
  2. ↑ "User Interactive Software for Analysis of Human Physiological Data". Nasa Tech Briefs, December 2006.
  3. ↑ "DADiSP Makes Complex Data Analysis Faster and Easier". DSP Development Corp. Retrieved March 2014.
  4. 1 2 "DADiSP 2002 Escape from the cell block". Scientific Computing World. Retrieved August 2003.
  5. ↑ "DADiSP SPL vs. MATLAB". DSP Development Corp. Retrieved March 2014.
  6. ↑ "DADiSP 6.7 B01 Release Notes". DSP Development Corp. Retrieved October 2015.
  7. ↑ "DADiSP 6.5 B05 Release Notes". DSP Development Corp. Retrieved March 2014.
  8. ↑ "DADiSP 6.5". Scientific Computing World. Retrieved June 2010.
  9. ↑ DADiSP 2.0 Wiley Online Library, The Professional Geographer Volume 44, Issue 1, pages 103–108, February 1992

Further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, May 05, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.