Difference between revisions of "Example function"
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− | The following function, [[Capm]] | + | The following function, [[Capm]], computes the expected return for a stock under the capital asset pricing model. |
:[[File:example_function_1.png|400px]] | :[[File:example_function_1.png|400px]] | ||
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==Parameters== | ==Parameters== | ||
− | It has three parameters, | + | It has three [[Function calls and parameters|parameters]], «rf», «rm», and «beta». The [[parameter qualifiers|parameter qualifier]] <code>Number</code> says that it expects that the parameters are numbers. |
==Description== | ==Description== | ||
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==Definition== | ==Definition== | ||
− | The definition is an expression that uses its parameters, | + | The definition is an expression that uses its parameters, «rf», «rm», and «beta», and evaluates to the value to be returned. |
==Sample usage== | ==Sample usage== | ||
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==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
+ | * [[Function calls and parameters]] | ||
+ | * [[Parameter qualifiers]] | ||
+ | * [[Function parameter qualifiers]] | ||
* [[User-Defined Functions]] | * [[User-Defined Functions]] | ||
<footer>Building Functions and Libraries / {{PAGENAME}} / Call a function</footer> | <footer>Building Functions and Libraries / {{PAGENAME}} / Call a function</footer> |
Revision as of 18:23, 19 May 2016
The following function, Capm, computes the expected return for a stock under the capital asset pricing model.
Parameters
It has three parameters, «rf», «rm», and «beta». The parameter qualifier Number
says that it expects that the parameters are numbers.
Description
The description says what the function returns and what its parameters mean.
Definition
The definition is an expression that uses its parameters, «rf», «rm», and «beta», and evaluates to the value to be returned.
Sample usage
You use the Capm() function in a definition in the same way you would use Analytica’s built-in functions. For example, if the risk free rate is 5%, the expected market return is 8%, and Stock-Beta
is defined as the beta value for a given stock, we can find the expected return according to the capital asset pricing model as:
Stock_return: Capm(5%, 8%, StockBeta)
The function works equally well when StockBeta
is an array of beta values — or if any parameter is an array — the result is an array of expected returns.
See Also
- Function calls and parameters
- Parameter qualifiers
- Function parameter qualifiers
- User-Defined Functions
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