ndex the elements of `x` and the last index is the degree of the HermiteE polynomial. If `c` is a 1-D array of coefficients of length `n + 1` and `V` is the array ``V = hermevander(x, n)``, then ``np.dot(V, c)`` and ``hermeval(x, c)`` are the same up to roundoff. This equivalence is useful both for least squares fitting and for the evaluation of a large number of HermiteE series of the same degree and sample points. Parameters ---------- x : array_like Array of points. The dtype is converted to float64 or complex128 depending on whether any of the elements are complex. If `x` is scalar it is converted to a 1-D array. deg : int Degree of the resulting matrix. Returns ------- vander : ndarray The pseudo-Vandermonde matrix. The shape of the returned matrix is ``x.shape + (deg + 1,)``, where The last index is the degree of the corresponding HermiteE polynomial. The dtype will be the same as the converted `x`. Examples -------- >>> from numpy.polynomial.hermite_e import hermevander >>> x = np.array([-1, 0, 1]) >>> hermevander(x, 3) array([[ 1., -1., 0., 2.], [ 1., 0., -1., -0.], [ 1., 1., 0., -2.]]) r*