"In an assignment A(I) = B, the number of elements in B and I must be the same" and cant work out why
Infos
Cette question est clôturée. Rouvrir pour modifier ou répondre.
Afficher commentaires plus anciens
I understand that it means that the matrices involved must be the same size. Apologies if i'm being stupid! Here is the main code:
function [] = BH();
mp=0.75;
ms=0.25;
mbh=1e6;
f0=-1.982;
f(1)=f0;
t0=(sqrt(6)*tan(f0/2)*(3+(tan(f0/2)^2)));
t(1)=t0;
R=((6*(mbh.^(1/3)))/(1+cos(f0)));
fdot=(sqrt(6)/36)*(1+cos(f0)).^2;
Rdot=((6*(mbh.^(1/3)))/((1+cos(f0)).^2))*fdot*sin(f0);
%initial conditions
xBH=0;
yBH=0;
vxBH=0;
vyBH=0;
xp(1)=(6*mbh.^(1/3)*cos(f0)/(1+cos(f0)));
yp(1)=(6*mbh.^(1/3)*sin(f0)/(1+cos(f0)))-ms;
vxp(1)=((Rdot*cos(f0))-(R*fdot*sin(f0)))+ms;
vyp(1)=((Rdot*sin(f0))+(R*fdot*cos(f0)));
xs(1)=(6*mbh.^(1/3)*cos(f0)/(1+cos(f0)));
ys(1)=(6*mbh.^(1/3)*sin(f0)/(1+cos(f0)))+mp;
vxs(1)=((Rdot*cos(f0))-(R*fdot*sin(f0)))-mp;
vys(1)=((Rdot*sin(f0))+(R*fdot*cos(f0)));
h=0.5;
nsteps=(f0)/-h;
for i=1:nsteps;
k1=h.*fun(f(i),xp(i));
k2=h.*fun(f(i)+k1/2,xp(i)+k1/2);
k3=h.*fun(f(i)+k2/2,xp(i)+k2/2);
k4=h.*fun(f(i)+k3,xp(i)+k3);
f(i+1)=f(i)-(k1./6)-(k2./3)-(k3./3)-(k4./6);
xp(i+1)=xp(i)+(k1(1,2)./6)+(k2(1,2)./3)+(k3(1,2)./3)+(k4(1,2)./6)
t(i+1)=t(i)+h;
end
It uses a separate function called "fun":
function a = fun(f,xp)
a(1) = f;
a(2) = xp;
this returns the error:
In an assignment A(I) = B, the number of elements in B and I must be the same.
Error in fun (line 2) a(1) = f;
Error in BH (line 30) k2=h.*fun(f(i)+k1/2,xp(i)+k1/2);
I don't see why though as there are only two variables specified in the "k1" line of the for loop. Any help much appriciated!
Réponses (1)
Marta Salas
le 12 Mar 2014
Modifié(e) : Marta Salas
le 12 Mar 2014
k1 is the output of fun so it's an array, it has 2 values. So, when you call
fun(f(i)+k1/2,xp(i)+k1/2)
you are trying to assign an array k1 (dim=1x2) to a(1) (dim=1x1) . The dimension doesn't agree.
3 commentaires
Simon Williams
le 12 Mar 2014
Marta Salas
le 12 Mar 2014
What's the purpose for the function fun?
Simon Williams
le 12 Mar 2014
Cette question est clôturée.
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!