Contents
Table
of Contents Book
Order Form
Table of Contents
1. Prologue
1.1 Why Ox 1.2 Availability 1.3 Ox version 1.4 Learining
Ox 1.5 Ox platforms 1.6 Ox supported data formats 1.7
Extending Ox 1.8 World Wide Wed 1.9 Online
documentation 1.10 Ox-users dicussion list 1.11
Installation 1.12 Completing the basic installation 1.13
Directory structure 1.14 OX3PATH 1.15 Ox for Unix
Part I: Introduction to Ox
2. Getting started with Ox
2.1 Introduction 2.2 A first Ox program 2.3 Running the
first Ox program 2.4 Online help 2.5 Using file names in
Ox 2.6 Ox file extensions 2.7 More on running Ox
programs 2.8 Command line arguments 2.9 Extending Ox
3. Introduction to the Ox language
3.1 Variables, types and scope 3.2 Indexing matrices 3.3
Functions and function arguements 3.4 The for and while
loops 3.5 The if statement 3.6 Operations and matrix
programming 3.7 Arrays 3.8 Multiple files: using #include and
#import 3.9 Object-oriented programming 3.10 Sytle and
Hungarian notation 3.11 Optimising for speed 3.12 OxGauss
4. Numerical accuracy
5. How to...
6. Function Summary
Part II: Function and Language Reference
7. Function summary
8. Function reference
9. Predefined Constants
9.1 Missing values (NaN) 9.2 Infinity
9. Graphics function reference
9.1 Introduction 9.2 Symbol and line types 9.3 Function
reference
11. Packages
11.1 Arma package 11.2 Maximisation package 11.3
Probability package 11.4 QuadPack
12. Class reference
12.1 Database and Sample class 12.2 Modelbase class 12.3
PcFiml class 12.4 PcFimlDgp class 12.5 PcNaiveDgp
class 12.6 RanMC class 12.7 Simulation class
13. Language Reference
13.1 Introduction 13.2 Lexical conventions 13.3
Identifers 13.4 Objects 13.5 External declarations 13.6
Namespace 13.7 Statements 13.8 Expressions 13.9
Preprocessing 13.10 Difference with ANSI C and C++
Reference
Subject Index
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