Can we distinguish between variables and parameters in a symbolic function?
    3 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
  
       Ältere Kommentare anzeigen
    
    Mohammad Shojaei Arani
 am 15 Dez. 2022
  
    
    
    
    
    Kommentiert: Mohammad Shojaei Arani
 am 17 Dez. 2022
            Hello,
I have a simple (perhaps naive, if so my appology) question. Consider the following
syms x f(x) x
f(x) = a*x;
Is there a way to distinguish between 'x' and 'a'? If I use symvar(f) it just gives the information about all vars and aparetly
cannot distinguish between x and a.
Any idea?
Thanks in advance,
Babak
2 Kommentare
  Dyuman Joshi
      
      
 am 15 Dez. 2022
				symvar determines symbolic variables in the expression. Since you have not defined a as a symbolic variable in the above code, symvar won't classify a as an output.
What is the data type of a?
Akzeptierte Antwort
  Dyuman Joshi
      
      
 am 15 Dez. 2022
        syms f(x) a m n z
f(x)=a*x
y=symvar(f)
I understand what you mean by 'cannot distinguish between x and a'
But, this is how syms variable are expressed in arrays. For example -
z=[m n]
However, you can convert the symbolic expression to string and obtain seperate variables -
z=symvar(char(f))
6 Kommentare
Weitere Antworten (1)
  Walter Roberson
      
      
 am 17 Dez. 2022
        f_variables = argnames(f)
f_param = setdiff(symvar(f), f_variables)
This is not the same thing as "all variables mentioned that are not parameters". symvar does not report any "bound" variables or any variables being used as functions.
A bound variable is like x in
int(f(x), x, a, b)
provided that f does not itself contain x then you could substitute any other variable name without affecting the output, like
int(f(Dummy), Dummy, a, b)
int() and symsum() and symprod() can all use bound variables.
Siehe auch
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!






