Can we distinguish between variables and parameters in a symbolic function?
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    Mohammad Shojaei Arani
 on 15 Dec 2022
  
    
    
    
    
    Commented: Mohammad Shojaei Arani
 on 17 Dec 2022
            Hello,
I have a simple (perhaps naive, if so my appology) question. Consider the following
syms x f(x) x
f(x) = a*x;
Is there a way to distinguish between 'x' and 'a'? If I use symvar(f) it just gives the information about all vars and aparetly
cannot distinguish between x and a.
Any idea?
Thanks in advance,
Babak
2 Comments
  Dyuman Joshi
      
      
 on 15 Dec 2022
				symvar determines symbolic variables in the expression. Since you have not defined a as a symbolic variable in the above code, symvar won't classify a as an output.
What is the data type of a?
Accepted Answer
  Dyuman Joshi
      
      
 on 15 Dec 2022
        syms f(x) a m n z
f(x)=a*x
y=symvar(f)
I understand what you mean by 'cannot distinguish between x and a'
But, this is how syms variable are expressed in arrays. For example -
z=[m n]
However, you can convert the symbolic expression to string and obtain seperate variables -
z=symvar(char(f))
6 Comments
More Answers (1)
  Walter Roberson
      
      
 on 17 Dec 2022
        f_variables = argnames(f)
f_param = setdiff(symvar(f), f_variables)
This is not the same thing as "all variables mentioned that are not parameters". symvar does not report any "bound" variables or any variables being used as functions.
A bound variable is like x in
int(f(x), x, a, b)
provided that f does not itself contain x then you could substitute any other variable name without affecting the output, like
int(f(Dummy), Dummy, a, b)
int() and symsum() and symprod() can all use bound variables.
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