switching functions for continuous time
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I am plotting a function for say:
t = 0:0.1:1 %seconds
I want to use one function for:
t < 0.2
One for:
t >= 0.2 & t <= 0.0.8
And then one for:
t >0.8
I can't get it to work using the conventions I have stated aboce
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Plus de réponses (8)
A
le 6 Juin 2011
0 votes
3 commentaires
Walter Roberson
le 6 Juin 2011
Yes, just replace f1, f2, f3 with your functions. The above code already pieces the parts together.
A
le 7 Juin 2011
Walter Roberson
le 7 Juin 2011
plot(t,y)
A
le 14 Juin 2011
0 votes
2 commentaires
Walter Roberson
le 14 Juin 2011
"for" loop and an if/elseif structure if it is expensive to compute the values.
If computing the values is relatively cheap,
y = f1(x);
idx = find(y >= 80,1,'first');
y(idx:end) = f2(x(idx:end));
A
le 15 Juin 2011
A
le 21 Juin 2011
0 votes
5 commentaires
Walter Roberson
le 21 Juin 2011
There can be multiple x of equal weight.
ydiff = abs(y - SpecificY);
closestX = x(ydiff == min(ydiff)); %warning, can have multiple entries
You would need different logic if, for example, you wanted only x for which y did not exceed the specific Y; the above logic finds the x for which the y is numerically closest above _or_ below the specific Y.
A
le 21 Juin 2011
A
le 21 Juin 2011
A
le 21 Juin 2011
Walter Roberson
le 21 Juin 2011
Good point about the index; sorry about that.
If your y are in increasing order, then
find(SpecificY < y,1,'last')
A
le 23 Juin 2011
3 commentaires
A
le 23 Juin 2011
Walter Roberson
le 23 Juin 2011
Time_Value = V_In * .632;
Time_Check = find(V_C_SS <= Time_Value,1,'last');
Time_Constant = t(Time_Check);
A
le 23 Juin 2011
A
le 23 Juin 2011
4 commentaires
Walter Roberson
le 23 Juin 2011
You haven't really defined what it means for f1 to "end", or what it means to use the final values of f1 for the initial conditions of f2. So, guessing...
overlap = 5; %samples
y = f1(x);
idx = find(y >= 80,1,'first');
startat = max(1,idx-overlap);
f2vals = f2(x(startat:end));
y(idx:end) = f2vals(idx-startat+1:end);
A
le 23 Juin 2011
Walter Roberson
le 23 Juin 2011
That's what the code you posted above does, unless f2 is sensitive to the position of the x as well as to the value of the x. If it _is_ sensitive to the position of the x, then the next thing we would need to know is whether the f2 values are calculated independently or if values from earlier input influence later output.
If there is dependence on the position then,
y = f1(x);
y2 = f2(x);
idx = find(y >= 80,1,'first');
y(idx:end) = y2(idx:end);
A
le 23 Juin 2011
A
le 23 Juin 2011
1 commentaire
Walter Roberson
le 23 Juin 2011
Time_Check = find(V_C_SS > Time_Value,1,'first') - 1;
Provided that your values do not start out above the time constant, dip, rise, with it being the point on the rise you want to get.
A
le 23 Juin 2011
0 votes
A
le 24 Juin 2011
0 votes
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