Plugging in values into matlab function

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Jb179
Jb179 am 2 Dez. 2017
Bearbeitet: Walter Roberson am 2 Dez. 2017
Hello, I want to know how to plug in multiple values into an equation that contains multiple variables. I've read using the anonymous function might be useful but I'm not entirely sure. Below is an example of what I mean
P = [eq1;eq2]
x = 1 , y = 3, z = 5
I want matlab to be able to plug in the values of x, y and z into the P matrix (for eq1 and eq2) so that it produces a matrix with number values, so something like P = [2;2]
  4 Kommentare
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 2 Dez. 2017
So is that
P = {'x^2 +2y +3z'; 'x*y -2z^2'}
or is that
P = ['x^2 +2y +3z'; 'x*y -2z^2 ']
or is it
syms x y z
P = [x^2 +2*y +3*z; x*y -2*z^2]
or is it
syms x y z
P = [x^2 + 2*y + 3*z; x*y - 2*z^2]
or something else?
Jb179
Jb179 am 2 Dez. 2017
I basically want to do something similar to this:
f= @(x) ... [ 2*x(1)^2+x(1)*x(2)-x(1)-2 ;x(1)^2-x(2) ];
J= @(x) ... [ 4*x(1)+x(2)-1 x(1) ;2*x(1) -1 ];
x=[0.9; 1.1];
however instead of using x(1) I would you x or x(2) would be z

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Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 2 Dez. 2017
Bearbeitet: Walter Roberson am 2 Dez. 2017
Have you considered possibilities such as
x = @(V) V(1);
y = @(V) V(2);
z = @(V) V(3);
f = @(V) [ 2*x(V)^2+x(V)*y(V)-X(V)-2; x(V)^2-y(V) ];
J = @(V) [ 4*x(V)+y(V))-1*x(V); 2*x(V)-1 ];
?

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