Thinking about this question again, I`m not sure I`ve answered the correct question at all.
My original method (Scanning different fit orders) will give aou an N-order Polynomial which fits the signal well, but the assumption that your signal is then also an N-order Polynomial is generally false. If you are simply looking for a polynomial which well describes your signal, this is OK.
If you are dealing with simple clean signals then you MIGHT be able to make assumptions on the signal type based on various fit coefficients, but if you`re trying to understand fundamentals of a real-world complex signal based on fit-algorithm errors, I would be, in addition to the other respondants, very cautious. I`m not a very good mathmatecian (I love that the fit algorith
ms simply
), so I can`t begin to give a hint as to do this kind of analysis.
Shane.
Using LV 6.1 and 8.2.1 on W2k (SP4) and WXP (SP2)