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How are editors supposed to know the difference between transpose operators and character arrays?

3 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
For example, with
B = A1 + A2' + A3 + A4'
I am seeing the second half of the RHS highlighted oddly because the editor thinks it's forming a character array.
Wouldn't it be very helpful (and obvious) to allow a different operator to do transposes?? You could always do the PITA way of defining separate variables for each transpose you want to do, but that defeats the point of defining the operator in the first place and you might as well just use transpose() then.
  5 Kommentare
leka0024
leka0024 am 30 Jun. 2023
Bearbeitet: leka0024 am 30 Jun. 2023
@Steven Lord even better point, thanks. (Although I wasn't proposing to do away with ' as transpose, just to allow users to define an alternate.)
The MATLAB extension for VS Code gets the highlighting correct, so perhaps somehow the jupyter-matlab-proxy group could see how the extension team was able to do it. The ideal thing would be for these two projects to merge into one ultimate tool for MATLAB coding: Notebooks in VS Code. :)
James Tursa
James Tursa am 30 Jun. 2023
Bearbeitet: James Tursa am 30 Jun. 2023
I haven't found the apostrophe ' operator to be an issue particularly. But there can be ambiguities with the .' operator with regards to where the period belongs. E.g., in the following:
2i^3.'
Does the period belong with the 3 making the apostrophe ' a ctranspose? Or does the period belong with the .' making it a straight transpose operator? You can run it to see ...
2i^3.'
ans = 0.0000 - 8.0000i
2i^(3.)'
ans = 0.0000 + 8.0000i
(2i^3).'
ans = 0.0000 - 8.0000i
So MATLAB pairs the period with the operator and not the number in this case. Of course, in this particular case if you wanted the ctranspose there is no reason to have the period at all:
2i^3'
ans = 0.0000 + 8.0000i
But my point is you sometimes may need to be careful how you write code with the dot operators such as .' to make the code intent clear to the reader.

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Akzeptierte Antwort

Matt J
Matt J am 30 Jun. 2023
Bearbeitet: Matt J am 30 Jun. 2023
A cheezy, but compact way you could define an alternative ctranspose operator (temporarily, within a particular workspace) is with a user-defined object that overloads mpower,
classdef myclass
methods
function out=mpower(base,obj)
out=ctranspose(base);
end
end
end % class
>> T=myclass;
>> A=reshape(1:12,3,4)
A =
1 4 7 10
2 5 8 11
3 6 9 12
>>A^T
ans =
1 2 3
4 5 6
7 8 9
10 11 12

Weitere Antworten (1)

Matt J
Matt J am 30 Jun. 2023
This seems to offer Jupyter Lab integration in a way that preserves Matlab syntax highlighting,
though I cannot find an example there of what happens with A' and A.' expressions.
  1 Kommentar
leka0024
leka0024 am 30 Jun. 2023
Thanks @Matt J , I am indeed using jupyter-matlab-proxy, that is the first screenshot above (with Jupyter Lab 3.6, they mention on the repo that highlighting is not yet supported on JL v4).

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