MATLAB FINANCIAL DERIVATIVES TOOLBOX Manuel d'utilisateur Page 43

  • Télécharger
  • Ajouter à mon manuel
  • Imprimer
  • Page
    / 119
  • Table des matières
  • MARQUE LIVRES
  • Noté. / 5. Basé sur avis des utilisateurs
Vue de la page 42
42
position (2,1) is taken to be the second (2), the (3,1) the third and finally the
(m, n) element is the last one (n*m). View the following example to
understand this king of matrix indexing.
Matlab’s command:
>> H=magic(4), H(1), H(2), H(9), H(16)
Matlab’s response:
H =
16 2 3 13
5 11 10 8
9 7 6 12
4 14 15 1
ans =
16
ans =
5
ans =
3
ans =
1
Comments:
Extracting specific elements from a matrix using single indexing.
For matrices, the colon notation “:” plays an important role. Colon can be
used to extract either a specific part of a matrix, or to view a whole row, a
whole column or a sub-matrix extracted from the original one. Earlier, the
colon was used to define vectors and it has been explained that it creates
elements from a starting_value through a finishing_value equally spaced
according to a defined step (if the step is not defined, then the step is taken
to be 1). In Matlab, a certain row of a matrix can be extracted by placing the
colon in the row_index, “K(:,column_index)”, and a certain column by placing
the colon in the column_index, “K(row_index:,:). A sub-matrix that is
composed by the r1 to r2 rows (r1=r2) and c1 to c2 columns (c1=c2) of the
original matrix can be retrieved according to the following syntax:
“K(r1:r2, c1:c2)”
Vue de la page 42
1 2 ... 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 ... 118 119

Commentaires sur ces manuels

Pas de commentaire