Matlab crashes but Octave doesn't

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The program below runs in Octave but crashes Matlab 2014. Mathworks won't help because my contract has run out. Any ideas would be helpful.
X = [1 , 2 ,3 , 4 ,5];
Y = [1,4,9,4, 1];
xdata = X(:);
A = [xdata.^2, xdata, ones(size(xdata))]
b = log(Y(:));
x = A\b
mu = -x(2)/x(1)/2;
sigma = sqrt( -1/2/x(1) );
A0 = exp(x(3)+mu^2/(2*sigma^2));
  14 Comments
John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 2 Jan 2019
Essentially, it means you can't use MATLAB for this, at least a too old release on a too new computer. I'm actually surprised MATLAB even started up. Complain to your institution (as if that will help.) But you can try. Argue that as new students enter the system, they are bringing in new (current) computers.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 2 Jan 2019
Apple made changes to MacOS that prevent older versions of MATLAB from running. (See my previous remarks about external interfaces...)

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Accepted Answer

James Tursa
James Tursa on 2 Jan 2019
What happens if you do the A\b differently? E.g., doing the LU decomposition manually and then backsolving yourself? Or doing pinv(A)*b?

More Answers (2)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 2 Jan 2019
If you need it in MATLAB, then pay the money and upgrade. It doesn't crash for me on R2018b. It gives:
A =
1 1 1
4 2 1
9 3 1
16 4 1
25 5 1
x =
-0.511931276922301
3.07158766153381
-2.58955627854091

Douglas Brenner
Douglas Brenner on 2 Jan 2019
Give that man a cigar and thank you very much.
pinv(A)*b work as I suspect doing the LU decomposition manually would.

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