Mode
The mode for a F random variable with numerator degrees of freedom d1
and denominator degrees of freedom d2
is
for d1 > 2
and d2 > 0
. Otherwise, the mode is not defined.
Usage
var mode = require( '@stdlib/stats/base/dists/f/mode' );
mode( d1, d2 )
Returns the mode of a F distribution with parameters d1
(numerator degrees of freedom) and d2
(denominator degrees of freedom).
var v = mode( 4.0, 5.0 );
// returns ~0.357
v = mode( 4.0, 12.0 );
// returns ~0.429
v = mode( 8.0, 4.0 );
// returns 0.5
If provided NaN
as any argument, the function returns NaN
.
var v = mode( NaN, 3.0 );
// returns NaN
v = mode( 3.0, NaN );
// returns NaN
If provided d1 <= 2
, the function returns NaN
.
var v = mode( 1.0, 3.0 );
// returns NaN
v = mode( -1.0, 3.0 );
// returns NaN
If provided d2 <= 0
, the function returns NaN
.
var v = mode( 3.0, 0.0 );
// returns NaN
v = mode( 3.0, -1.0 );
// returns NaN
Examples
var randu = require( '@stdlib/random/base/randu' );
var EPS = require( '@stdlib/constants/float64/eps' );
var mode = require( '@stdlib/stats/base/dists/f/mode' );
var d1;
var d2;
var v;
var i;
for ( i = 0; i < 10; i++ ) {
d1 = ( randu()*10.0 ) + EPS;
d2 = ( randu()*10.0 ) + EPS;
v = mode( d1, d2 );
console.log( 'd1: %d, d2: %d, mode(X;d1,d2): %d', d1.toFixed( 4 ), d2.toFixed( 4 ), v.toFixed( 4 ) );
}