How can I maximize a function in Matlab?

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Hi everyone,
A(i,1) = sum(B(i,:)) + C*3;
I have function A as above. I wan t to maksimize this function. How can I do this?
Thanks.
  4 Comments
John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 9 Sep 2019
Edited: John D'Errico on 9 Sep 2019
Why did you unaccept Jan's answer? It is the correct solution. What was wrong with it? Just negate the function, exactly as he said. Then you are minimizing the negative of your function, which maximizes it! So WTP?
Abdullah Türk
Abdullah Türk on 9 Sep 2019
I didn't say Jan's answer was wrong. I applied the Jan's answer for my code and obtained the right result. So, there are no problems left.

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Accepted Answer

Jan
Jan on 9 Sep 2019
Matlab contains some tools for minimization. A maximization does exactlly the same, if you change the sign of the optimization criterion.
  4 Comments
Abdullah Türk
Abdullah Türk on 9 Sep 2019
Jan and John D'Errico thank you both. I applied the solution you suggested above and after a bit of work I maximized the my problem. Thanks again.
John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 9 Sep 2019
In fact, most optimizers seem to be minimization codes. It just seems a logical standard, since often one wants to minimize a sum of squares, perhaps. That may acttually be the most common general class of optimization problem overall anyway. So it makes sense that all optimizers will be consistent, thus minimizers. That way you need not remember which direction some tool works, as opposed to others. And of course, negating a function makes a min into a max, and vice versa.

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