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Statistics::Basic::StdDev - find the standard deviation of a list

Author

       Paul Miller "<jettero@cpan.org>"

       I  am  using  this software in my own projects...  If you find bugs, please please please let me know. :)
       Actually, let me know if you find it handy at all.  Half the fun of releasing this stuff is knowing  that
       people use it.

Methods

new()
           The  constructor takes a list of values, a single array ref, or a single Statistics::Basic::Vector as
           arguments.  It returns a Statistics::Basic::StdDev object.

           Note: normally you'd use the mean() constructor, rather than building these by hand using "new()".

       query_mean()
           Returns the Statistics::Basic::Mean object used in the standard deviation computation.

       _OVB::import()
           This module also inherits all the overloads and methods from Statistics::Basic::_OneVectorBase.

Name

       Statistics::Basic::StdDev - find the standard deviation of a list

Overloads

       This object is overloaded.  It tries to return an appropriate string for the calculation or the value  of
       the computation in numeric context.

       In boolean context, this object is always true (even when empty).

See Also

perl(1), Statistics::Basic, Statistics::Basic::_OneVectorBase, Statistics::Basic::Vector

perl v5.36.0                                       2022-11-19                     Statistics::Basic::StdDev(3pm)

Synopsis

       Invoke it this way:

           my $stddev = stddev(1,2,3);

       Or this way:

           my $v1  = vector(1,2,3);
           my $std = stddev($v1);

       And then either query the values or print them like so:

           print "The stddev of $v1: $std\n";
           my $sq = $std->query;
           my $s0 = 0+$std;

       Create a 20 point "moving" stddev like so:

           use Statistics::Basic qw(:all nofill);

           my $sth = $dbh->prepare("select col1 from data where something");
           my $len = 20;
           my $std = stddev()->set_size($len);

           $sth->execute or die $dbh->errstr;
           $sth->bind_columns( my $val ) or die $dbh->errstr;

           while( $sth->fetch ) {
               $std->insert( $val );
               if( defined( my $s = $std->query ) ) {
                   print "StdDev: $s\n";
               }

               # This would also work:
               # print "StdDev: $s\n" $std->query_filled;
           }

See Also