having problem plotting ramp function

the line f(0001:3000)=((f0/3)*dt);
was supposed to maek the f(t) plot having a ramp function of f0/3 * time when time is at 0~3
I tried f(0001:3000)=((f0/3)*time) and it got an error which says "Unable to perform assignment because the left and right sides have a different number of elements."
please help

5 commentaires

Shivam
Shivam le 2 Déc 2024
Hi Yin,
Could you attach the data dt for me to debug the issue? You can use the paperclick icon to attach the data.
Tien Yin
Tien Yin le 2 Déc 2024
here's the file i've been working on
Tien Yin
Tien Yin le 2 Déc 2024
by the way here's how i want my f(t) to look like
VBBV
VBBV le 2 Déc 2024
Modifié(e) : VBBV le 3 Déc 2024
@Tien Yin You can modify the present code as below. A better way to do is to use piecewise function as mentioned by @Sam Chak
clc
clearvars
m=5;
k=18;
c=1.2;
f0=100;
wn=sqrt(k/m);
cc=2*m*wn;
Dr=c/cc;
wd=wn*sqrt(1-Dr^2);
time=linspace(0,10,5001);
idx1 = find(time==3); %
idx2 = find(time==5); % use find
f=zeros(1,length(time));
for kx = 1:numel(time)-1
if kx <= idx1
f(kx+1)=f(kx) + (f0/3)*(time(kx+1)-time(kx));
elseif kx>idx1 & kx<=idx2
f(kx+1) = 100;
else
f(kx+1) = 0;
end
end
figure;
plot(time,f);xlabel('t(s)'); ylabel('f(t)')
xticks(1:1:10);grid
axis([0 10 0 110])
Tien Yin
Tien Yin le 3 Déc 2024
Thanks! So far I think using heaviside is a clearer way to present function too

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 Réponse acceptée

Hi Yin,
You can use the below script to get the desired figures.
m = 5;
k = 18;
c = 1.2;
f0 = 100;
wn = sqrt(k/m);
cc = 2*m*wn;
Dr = c/cc;
wd = wn*sqrt(1-Dr^2);
dt = 0.01; % assumed dt
time = 0:dt:10;
f = zeros(1, length(time));
f(1:round(3/dt)) = (f0/3) * (0:dt:3-dt); % Linear increase from 0 to 3 seconds
f(round(3/dt)+1:round(5/dt)) = f0; % Constant from 3 to 5 seconds
% f remains 0 after 5 seconds
g = (1/(m*wd))*exp(-Dr*wn*time).*sin(wd*time);
x = conv(f, g)*dt;
x = x(1:length(time)); % Ensure x is the same length as time
figure;
subplot(221); plot(time, f, 'r'); xlabel('t(s)'); ylabel('f(t)');
subplot(222); plot(time, g); xlabel('t(s)'); ylabel('g(t)');
subplot(223); plot(time, x); xlabel('t(s)'); ylabel('位移(m)');
Hope it helps.

Plus de réponses (1)

The signal in the image is a piecewise function that consists of three sub-functions defined over different intervals: , , . You can apply the piecewise() function from the Symbolic Math Toolbox, or you can use the MATLAB indexing approach (though this method may not be suitable for publication in a journal).
Alternatively, you can use a direct math formula to combine the sub-functions into a one-line equation, as shown below. Since the second and third sub-functions can be described using a Heaviside function, this effectively reduces the representation to "two" sub-functions.
If you are interested, you can find another example here:
t = linspace(0, 10, 1001);
t1 = 3;
t2 = 5;
% Functions at subintervals
f1 = 100/3*t; % y1, Ramp function at t < t1
f2 = 100*heaviside(t2 - t); % y2, Heaviside function at t > t1
% Applying the Piecewise Function Put Together (PFPT) formula
f = f1 + (f2 - f1).*heaviside(t - t1);
% Plot
plot(t, f, 'linewidth', 1.5), grid on, ylim([-50, 150])
title('Piecewise Function')
xlabel('t')
ylabel('f(t)')

1 commentaire

Tien Yin
Tien Yin le 2 Déc 2024
thanks alot!
i'm new to MATLAB now I learnt a new way to display piecewise function!

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