ga in the command line

3 views (last 30 days)
ARUN BORGOHAIN
ARUN BORGOHAIN on 20 Jun 2017
Edited: Walter Roberson on 21 Jun 2017
k = 1:10;
fitnessfcn =@(x)( 2+2*k-exp(k*x(1))-exp(k*x(2)) );
x = ga(fitnessfcn, 2) % nvars=2; invoke an optimization routine
I am getting following errors;
Subscripted assignment dimension mismatch. Caused by: Failure in user-supplied fitness function evaluation. GA cannot continue.
Also how to add a Starting guess; x0 = [0.3 0.4]
thanking for kind help!

Accepted Answer

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 20 Jun 2017
Your k is a vector, so ( 2+2*k-exp(k*x(1))-exp(k*x(2)) ) is a vector. However, your fitness function is required to return a scalar; https://www.mathworks.com/help/gads/ga.html#inputarg_fitnessfcn
There is no way to add a starting guess for ga. However, you can use an options structure that has InitialPopulationMatrix set in it. Scroll down a bit from https://www.mathworks.com/help/gads/ga.html#bs08mt8-4 to find the options description.
  4 Comments
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 20 Jun 2017
Edited: Walter Roberson on 21 Jun 2017
When you have a "for" loop that assigns to the same unindexed variable each time, and there are no randomization calls or other "side effects" being made, then the effect of the loop is the same as if you had only done the last iteration.
for k = 1:10;
fun =@(x) sum( 2 + 2*k-exp(k*x(1))-exp(k*x(2)) );
end
is the same as
k = 10;
fun =@(x) sum( 2 + 2*k-exp(k*x(1))-exp(k*x(2)) );
In turn, since k is going to be a scalar for that, and none of the sub-expressions create vectors, the result would be the same as
k = 10;
fun =@(x) 2 + 2*k-exp(k*x(1))-exp(k*x(2));
Also lsqnonlin minimizes the sum of squares of the values, whereas what you attempted to submit to ga would minimize the sum of the values, which is very different. The ga equivalent would be
k = 1 : 10;
fun =@(x) sum( (2 + 2*k-exp(k*x(1))-exp(k*x(2))).^2 );
ARUN BORGOHAIN
ARUN BORGOHAIN on 21 Jun 2017
Thanks for clear concept & detail explanation; I've to clear theory part of these functions first!

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (0)

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!