InputType
- Input class to the Kernel@CodeReview(reviewer="Kevin R. Dixon", date="2009-07-08", changesNeeded=false, comments={"Made clone call super.clone.","Looks fine otherwise."}) public class ExponentialKernel<InputType> extends DefaultKernelContainer<InputType> implements Kernel<InputType>
ExponentialKernel
class implements a kernel that applies the
exponential function to the result of another kernel.kernel
Constructor and Description |
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ExponentialKernel()
Creates a new instance of ExponentialKernel.
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ExponentialKernel(Kernel<? super InputType> kernel)
Creates a new instance of ExponentialKernel.
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Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
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ExponentialKernel<InputType> |
clone()
This makes public the clone method on the
Object class and
removes the exception that it throws. |
double |
evaluate(InputType x,
InputType y)
The exponential kernel takes the exponential of applying another kernel
to the two given inputs.
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getKernel, setKernel
public ExponentialKernel()
public ExponentialKernel<InputType> clone()
AbstractCloneableSerializable
Object
class and
removes the exception that it throws. Its default behavior is to
automatically create a clone of the exact type of object that the
clone is called on and to copy all primitives but to keep all references,
which means it is a shallow copy.
Extensions of this class may want to override this method (but call
super.clone()
to implement a "smart copy". That is, to target
the most common use case for creating a copy of the object. Because of
the default behavior being a shallow copy, extending classes only need
to handle fields that need to have a deeper copy (or those that need to
be reset). Some of the methods in ObjectUtil
may be helpful in
implementing a custom clone method.
Note: The contract of this method is that you must use
super.clone()
as the basis for your implementation.clone
in interface CloneableSerializable
clone
in class DefaultKernelContainer<InputType>