Why does my sin graph look like a triangle?

4 Kommentare

We would have to know what your function dfdt is doing in order to say for certain. Please copy/paste all your code here so we can run it and see.
James Tursa
James Tursa am 10 Mai 2023
@Roos Never post code as an image ... we can't run images at our end. Please always post code as regular text highlighted with the CODE button.
Roos
Roos am 11 Mai 2023
Bearbeitet: Roos am 11 Mai 2023
@Cris LaPierre @James Tursa , here you go, sorry I did not realize we could not send photos
function za = dfdt (z,fs)
% za = dfdt (z,fs)
% determines numerically the derivative za
% of signal z.
% z is registered at sampling frequency fs.
h = 1/fs;
n =length (z);
for i = 2:n-1
za (i) = (z(i+1) - z(i-1))/(2*h);
end
za(1)= (z(2)-z(1))/h;
za(n)= (z(n)-z(n-1))/h;
You can obviously post pictures, but then you are asking the community to rewrite yout code from a picture. It's much simpler for us if you just copy/paste your code instead.

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Antworten (1)

Cris LaPierre
Cris LaPierre am 10 Mai 2023

0 Stimmen

Your sin wave is plotted just fine. However, it looks like a straight line because the magnitude of your second plot (in red) is so much larger (1 vs 5e5)

3 Kommentare

Roos
Roos am 11 Mai 2023
how do I change the magnitude?
Stephen23
Stephen23 am 11 Mai 2023
Bearbeitet: Stephen23 am 11 Mai 2023
"how do I change the magnitude?"
Rather than changing your data, I suspect that YYAXIS or PLOTYY is what you are looking for:
Cris LaPierre
Cris LaPierre am 11 Mai 2023
Bearbeitet: Cris LaPierre am 11 Mai 2023
BTW, the derivative of sin is cosine. So the correct plot should show a sin and cosine wave of the same frequency and amplitude.

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R2023a

Gefragt:

am 10 Mai 2023

Bearbeitet:

am 11 Mai 2023

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