Converting Anonymous Function to a Symbolic Function
26 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
Keenan Descartin
on 11 Mar 2019
Commented: Steven Lord
on 30 Dec 2023
Hello,
I have an anonymous function that looks like this (v=velocity, t=time):
v = @(t) exp(1).^(sin(t)) - 1;
and I want to turn it into a symbolic function. How can I achieve this?
0 Comments
Accepted Answer
Adam Danz
on 11 Mar 2019
Edited: Adam Danz
on 28 Mar 2019
Is this what you're looking for?
v = @(t) exp(1).^(sin(t)) - 1;
sym(v)
%ans =
%(3060513257434037/1125899906842624)^sin(t) - 1
% where 3060513257434037/1125899906842624 is an approximation of exp(1)
3 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 13 Nov 2020
Or equivalently,
sym t
v(t)
Caution: not everything can be converted these ways, and not everything will convert the way you expect.
More Answers (2)
Walter Roberson
on 23 Apr 2021
v = @(t) exp(1).^(sin(t)) - 1;
str2sym(char(v)) %r2017b or later
madhan ravi
on 29 Mar 2019
Edited: madhan ravi
on 29 Mar 2019
This turns the function handle argument as symbolic variable as well as the function handle into a symbolic function:
V=func2str(v);
z=regexp(V,'[^()]*','match');
syms(regexp(z{2},'\,','split'))
str2sym(regexp(V,'(?<=[\)])\S*','match')) % requires 2017b or later
sym(regexp(V,'(?<=[\)])\S*','match','once')) % prior to 2017b (haven't tested)
7 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 30 Dec 2023
You cannot convert calls to integral() into symbolic calls -- not unless you do text manipulation.
I recommend that you give up on this.
Steven Lord
on 30 Dec 2023
The problem occurs well before the sym call.
%at = 1;
%bt = 1;
w = @(k,T) log(1 - exp(-k.^2 + 1/T)).*(at./k + bt*k)
try % Using try/catch so I can evaluate other code later in this comment
w(1, 2)
catch ME
fprintf("MATLAB threw the following error:\n\n%s\n", ME.message)
end
Neither at nor bt are defined before the anonymous function w is defined, and neither of those identifiers are specified in the list of input arguments. Therefore they are left undefined. When you try to evaluate the anonymous function, MATLAB checks to see if there are functions named at and bt that can be called with 0 input arguments; if there are, it can call them and use their output in the anonymous function.
Since there are no such functions, MATLAB complains that it cannot evaluate the anonymous function.
If all the operations you perform in your anonymous function were supported for symbolic variables, you could just evaluate the anonymous function.
f = @(x) sin(x)+cos(1/x)-exp(x^2);
syms t
ft = f(t) % sin, cos, exp, /, and ^ are all defined for sym objects
But if you know you're going to want to integrate symbolically, don't call the numeric integration function integral and then convert the result to a symbolic expression. Call the symbolic integration function int instead.
See Also
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!