Symbols vs Floating points

2 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Richard
Richard le 28 Mar 2012
This question has to do with the question in this link which Jan has kindly shed some light on.
As mentioned in my comment, I am wondering why my x0 is of class 'sym'. I tried playing around with it and discovered that the problem lies with c0=f(a0,b0).
But I don't know what I can do with it to make it a 'double'. The thing is c0 is a number, no?
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Richard
Richard le 28 Mar 2012
Thanks, Jan.
f = @(a,b) diff(100*a^5+b, sym('a'));
a0=10;
b0=10;
c0=f(a0,b0);
x0 = [a0,b0,c0];
The curly brackets aren't actually there (though the square ones are) -- I thought that using the curly ones in this forum gives the code font -- sorry it is really me being stupid!
Jan
Jan le 28 Mar 2012
The formatting in this forum is not intuitive.

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Jan
Jan le 28 Mar 2012
Your f contains the term "sym('a')". Therefore the results get the type sym also. Perhaps you want to use the command double to make the symbolic expression numerically.
  1 commentaire
Richard
Richard le 28 Mar 2012
Hi, Jan, Thanks a lot! It is fixed now! :)

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