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what is wrong with my code?

1 vue (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Purvil Patel
Purvil Patel le 30 Avr 2017
Commenté : James Tursa le 13 Août 2018
Write a function called light_speed that takes as input a row vector of distances in kilometers and returns two row vectors of the same length. Each element of the first output argument is the time in minutes that light would take to travel the distance specified by the corresponding element of the input vector. To check your math, it takes a little more than 8 minutes for sunlight to reach Earth which is 150 million kilometers away. The second output contains the input distances converted to miles. Assume that the speed of light is 300,000 km/s and that one mile equals 1.609 km.
Problem 6 (light_speed):
Testing with argument(s) 150000000
Feedback: Your program made an error for argument(s) 150000000
Your solution is _not_ correct.
>> [tt ee] = light_speed1([370000000,170000000,530000000])
tt =
20.5473 9.4407 29.4327
ee =229906900 105632900 329326100
  3 commentaires
Image Analyst
Image Analyst le 30 Avr 2017
How can that be? There is no way you can get a correct answer if you can't even run the program!
Anupriya Krishnamoorthy
Anupriya Krishnamoorthy le 25 Jan 2018
function [time_in_minutes,distance_in_miles] = light_speed(distance_km) time_in_minutes = distance_km /(18000000); distance_in_miles = distance_km / 1.609; end

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Réponses (2)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst le 30 Avr 2017
distances = velocity * time, so time = distances/velocity. Of course you have to make sure the units work out. But you forgot to include your code so we don't know how to fix it. Chances are your unit scaling factors are wrong.

shantam sultania
shantam sultania le 13 Août 2018
Modifié(e) : James Tursa le 13 Août 2018
i have a problem in this code i think that the code is right but the thing is i am always getting only one output
%code is :
function [time,dist] = light_speed(distance)
time = distance /(18000000);
dist = distance / 1.609;
end
%output is
>> light_speed(distance);
>> f=light_speed(distance);
>> f
f =
0.4000 0.6000 0.8000
>>
i am always getting only one output please let me know soon
  1 commentaire
James Tursa
James Tursa le 13 Août 2018
You have to request both outputs on the lhs. E.g.,
[f,d] = light_speed(distance);

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