How can I assign zeros to a particular value in an expression

1 view (last 30 days)
Is it possible to assign zeros to following entries: u(N-N), u(N) i.e u(0) and u(4) in the loop below?
N =4;
u = (1:N);
v = (N:2*N-2);
for i=2:N
rhsode(i,1)=(u(i)-2*u(i-1)+u(i-2))+(v(i)-v(i-2))
end
  1 Comment
dpb
dpb on 10 Aug 2022
No. MATLAB arrays are 1-based indexing (1:N) and that is inviolate (unlike C which is 0-based (0:N-1) and also inviolate). Fortran has the facility to define arrays with arbitrary indexing (although the default is also 1-based); unfortunately, The MathWorks chose to not bring that faciility over.
You can only address elements u(1) through u(4) and v(1) through v(3) based on N=4 above.

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong on 10 Aug 2022
test
rhsode = 2×1
0 5
rhsode = 3×1
0 5 2
rhsode = 4×1
0 5 2 -9
function test
N =4;
u = (1:N);
v = (N:2*N-2);
function ui = getu(i)
if i <= 0 | i >= 4
ui = 0;
else
ui = u(i);
end
end
function vi = getv(i)
if i <= 0 | i >= 4
vi = 0;
else
vi = v(i);
end
end
for i=2:N
rhsode(i,1)=(getu(i)-2*getu(i-1)+getu(i-2))+(getv(i)-getv(i-2))
end
end

More Answers (1)

Matt J
Matt J on 10 Aug 2022
Edited: Matt J on 10 Aug 2022
N =8;
u = [0,(1:N-1),0];
v=N:N-1+numel(u);
rhsode=diff(u,2)+v(3:end)-v(1:end-2)
rhsode = 1×7
2 2 2 2 2 2 -6
  4 Comments
dpb
dpb on 10 Aug 2022
What do you expect the the results to be?
Internally with the various builtin functions like <polyval> and friends, MATLAB represents a polynomial as a row vector with coefficients in descending powers with missing terms explicitly represented by 0 in the appropriate position. But, vectors in MATLAB are still 1-based addressing so
p=[1 -4 4];
would be the representation of quadratic x.^2 - 4*x + 4
But, it's totally unclear what your code is intended to produce...
Matt J
Matt J on 10 Aug 2022
Edited: Matt J on 10 Aug 2022
Sorry, I still didn't understand this. How can I relate this to my for loop to give me 3 polynomials since I want u_1, u_2 and u_3?
The code you've posted aims to generate an output rhsode of length N-1. That is what my code does.
It is not clear however what boundary conditions you intended on v, so I just assumed in my examples that it was to be extrapolated linearly.

Sign in to comment.

Categories

Find more on Loops and Conditional Statements in Help Center and File Exchange

Products


Release

R2022a

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!