How can I change the variable x0 to x2,x3,x4,...xn . So it still produces the same pattern?

2 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Azhahra Vindy Ariesta
Azhahra Vindy Ariesta le 24 Juil 2022
Commenté : Rik le 20 Août 2022
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  2 commentaires
Stephen23
Stephen23 le 18 Août 2022
Modifié(e) : Stephen23 le 18 Août 2022
Original question from Azhahra Vindy Ariesta retrieved from Google Cache:
How can I change the variable x0 to x2,x3,x4,...xn . So it still produces the same pattern?
Hi guys, your help will mean a lot.
So I'm making prediction modeling with Gray GM(1,N) method. In the formula it is necessary to define the values of the variables X and Y. Where in my program, the variable Y is A and the variable X is x0. The X variable that I have there are 7 factors that affect the Y variable.
But what my program is asking for, each X variable should be separated. So in this case, I'm confused about changing the loop function and changing what it should have been
x0 = [408, 454, 941, 17162, 35687, 19932, 61510, 81608, 122599, 199153, 156101, 120015;
124171, 190032, 219189, 152435, 130347, 191144, 133795, 53560, 31457, 26162, 15893, 20052;
70409, 207282, 1494766, 1433620, 1110495, 2224241, 2359721, 2913705, 2800503, 912552, 600338, 297624;
204975, 190683, 122735, 60850, 46974, 33007, 65187, 79223, 53214, 48594, 26030, 29108;
67018, 38201, 19335, 11657, 12855, 6542, 6611, 4101, 2953, 2723, 1313, 1393;
190988, 182134, 120311, 60621, 44094, 31392, 53312, 71792, 50007, 44888, 24092, 27284;
72365, 46900, 21759, 11886, 15735, 8157, 18336, 11826, 6160, 5761, 3251, 3537];
then changed to:
x0 = [408, 454, 941, 17162, 35687, 19932, 61510, 81608, 122599, 199153, 156101, 120015];
x1 = [124171, 190032, 219189, 152435, 130347, 191144, 133795, 53560, 31457, 26162, 15893, 20052];
x2 = [ 70409, 207282, 1494766, 1433620, 1110495, 2224241, 2359721, 2913705, 2800503, 912552, 600338, 297624];
etc. to xn.
This is my current program
clear
clc
A =[85983, 70017, 42320, 26565, 21439, 113409, 271185, 35930, 7182, 3775, 2407, 1350]; %(X0(1))
x0 =[408, 454, 941, 17162, 35687, 19932, 61510, 81608, 122599, 199153, 156101, 120015; %(X0(2))
124171, 190032, 219189, 152435, 130347, 191144, 133795, 53560, 31457, 26162, 15893, 20052; %(X0(3))
70409, 207282, 1494766, 1433620, 1110495, 2224241, 2359721, 2913705, 2800503, 912552, 600338, 297624; %(X0(4))
204975, 190683, 122735, 60850, 46974, 33007, 65187, 79223, 53214, 48594, 26030, 29108; %(X0(5))
67018, 38201, 19335, 11657, 12855, 6542, 6611, 4101, 2953, 2723, 1313, 1393; %(X0(6))
190988, 182134, 120311, 60621, 44094, 31392, 53312, 71792, 50007, 44888, 24092, 27284; %((X0(7))
72365, 46900, 21759, 11886, 15735, 8157, 18336, 11826, 6160, 5761, 3251, 3537]; %(X0(8))
[n,m]=size(x0); % Constitutes a matrix
AGO=cumsum(A);
T=1;
x1=zeros(n,m+T);
for i=1:n
for j=1:m
for k=1:j
x1(i,j)=x1(i,j)+x0(i,k);% The original data is accumulated once to get xi(1)
end
end
end
for k=1:(m-1)
Z(k)=(AGO(k)+AGO(k+1))/2; %Z(i) generates a sequence for the immediate mean of xi(1)
end
x11=x1(:,1:m);
X=x1(:,2:m)';% intercept matrix
Yn = A; %Yn is a constant term vector
Yn(1)=[];% starts from the second number, ie x(2), x(3)...
Yn=Yn';
%Yn=A(:,2:m)';
B=[-Z',X];
C=((B'*B)\(B'*Yn))';% is established by formula GM(1,n) model
a=C(1);
b=C(:,2:n+1);
F=[];
F(1)=A(1);
u=zeros(1,m);
for i=1:m
for j=1:n
u(i)=u(i)+(b(j)*x11(j,i));
end
end
for k=2:m
F(k)=(A(1)-u(k-1)/a)/exp(a*(k-1))+u(k-1)/a;
end
G=[];
G(1)=A(1);
for k=2:m
G(k)=F(k)-F(k-1);% Difference between the two to restore the original sequence, get the predicted data
end
Rik
Rik le 20 Août 2022
Despite your flag, you editing away does not make your question not appropriate. It is just a rude thing to do.

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Réponses (1)

Steven Lord
Steven Lord le 24 Juil 2022
Can you dynamically create variables with numbered names like x1, x2, x3, etc.? Yes.
Should you do this? The general consensus is no. That Answers post explains why this is generally discouraged and offers several alternative approaches.

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