How to define a function consisting of multiple parts (i.e different f:n at different times) in Matlab using a single equation?
조회 수: 115 (최근 30일)
이전 댓글 표시
Example
f(x)
= x^2 for 0<x<1;
= x^3 for 1<x<2;
= ......and so on.
Please help me with this.
댓글 수: 0
채택된 답변
Sally Al Khamees
2016년 12월 23일
편집: Sally Al Khamees
2017년 2월 21일
If you have R2016b and the Symbolic Math Toolbox installed, you can just use the piecewise function:
Here is an example:
syms y(x);
y(x) = piecewise(1<x <2, x^3, 2 <= x <= 3, x^2, 1)
fplot(y)
%You can evaluate it at one point. Example when x = 2
y(2)
%You can evaluate a vector. Example
v = linspace(1,4,4)
y(v)
댓글 수: 1
Samuel Silas Ng'habi
2023년 4월 27일
What if the value and the conditions are expressed as nth -term. How will you plot the function See pictures attached
추가 답변 (2개)
Walter Roberson
2013년 4월 22일
You can define it symbolically using MuPAD's "piecewise" construct.
In some cases you can define it numerically using logical constructs such as
(x > 1 & x < 2) .* x.^3 + (x > 0 & x < 1) .* x^2
This will not work properly for locations that generate NaN or infinity when evaluated for any part. For example, if f(x) = 1 for x = 0, and f(x) = 1/x for other x, then you cannot use
(x == 0) .* 1 + (x ~= 0) .* 1./x
because the second part will generate NaN when evaluated for x(K) = 0, and the NaN multiplied by the 0 of (x(K) ~= 0) will still be NaN instead of vanishing to 0 as it does for finite values. Similarily, 0 * inf is NaN rather than 0.
John BG
2016년 12월 23일
y=[1:0.001:2].^3
댓글 수: 4
Stephen23
2017년 2월 22일
@John BG: how could this be used in a function of x (as the question requests), e.g.:
fun = @(x) ???
Note that both Sally Al Khamees' and Walter Roberson's answers provide this.
Walter Roberson
2017년 2월 22일
Consider, for example, if the task is to find the point at which the function equals 3.5,
x0 = 2 * rand(); %range is 0 to 2
fzero(@(x) f(x) - 3.5, x0)
Using a fixed dx is not going to be able to handle this task -- not unless dx = eps(realmin), so that you are testing all 2^62 representable numbers between 0 and 2.
You could, of course, write code that assumes that the input is a scalar:
function y = f(x)
y = 0;
if x > 0 & x < 1
y = x.^2;
elseif x > 1 & x < 2
y = x.^3;
end
end
and you could loop that code for non-scalar x.
You can use logical indexing:
function y = f(x);
y = zeros(size(x));
mask = x > 0 & x < 1;
y(mask) = x(mask).^2;
mask = x > 1 & x < 2;
y(mask) = x(mask).^3;
end
You can define it with an anonymous function,
f = @(x) (x > 1 & x < 2) .* x.^3 + (x > 0 & x < 1) .* x^2;
You can look at the pattern and predict
f = @(x) (x ~= ceil(x)) .* x.^(1 + ceil(x));
And all of those versions are functions that could be used as functions over arbitrary domains such as for fzero() purposes.
But using a fixed dx is not an approach that can be used for this kind of common application.
참고 항목
카테고리
Help Center 및 File Exchange에서 Symbolic Math Toolbox에 대해 자세히 알아보기
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!