How to Make a function accept vector inputs
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function Ml = myseries(t)
n=0;
while (n<10)
Ml = sum(t.^n/(gamma(n + 1)));
n = n+1;
end
The above code runs well as long as the input variable is a scalar; for vectorized inputs, it fails. What might be wrong?
4 Comments
Azzi Abdelmalek
on 21 Dec 2013
What "It fails" means? is there any error message?
John D'Errico
on 22 Dec 2013
It isn't a question of MAKING it accept vector input. ANY function can always accept vector inputs. The issue is your code, making it work with vectors.
Ben
on 29 Mar 2017
sum(t.^n/(gamma(n + 1))) needs to have a . before the /
Walter Roberson
on 29 Mar 2017
./ would only be needed if the right hand side, gamma(n+1) was a vector or matrix, but in this context it is a scalar.
Accepted Answer
More Answers (2)
Walter Roberson
on 21 Dec 2013
Your current code overwrites all of Ml each time through the "while" loop, and so is unlikely to be doing what you want.
for n = 0 : 9
Ml(n,:) = sum(t.^n/(gamma(n + 1)));
end
4 Comments
Chuzymatics Chuzymatics
on 21 Dec 2013
Youssef Khmou
on 21 Dec 2013
Just a small correction, @Walter, the index must start at 1.
Walter Roberson
on 21 Dec 2013
Right, sorry,
for n = 0 : 9
Ml(n+1,:) = sum(t.^n/(gamma(n + 1)));
end
Chuzymatics Chuzymatics
on 22 Dec 2013
Image Analyst
on 21 Dec 2013
Edited: Image Analyst
on 21 Dec 2013
I think you can to what you want to do with one of these functions. Not sure what you want to do so pick one:
function theSum = myseries(t)
% Vectorized method.
n = 1:length(t);
theSum = sum(t.^n ./ (gamma(n + 1)));
function theSum = myseries(t)
% For loop method.
theSum = 0;
for n = 1 : length(t)
theSum = theSum + t(n)^n ./ gamma(n + 1);
end
This does something completely different than the other two answers but I think is what you were actually intending, which is trying to sum a series.
5 Comments
Youssef Khmou
on 21 Dec 2013
i think the output should be a vector , if it was not the case, then a simple "sum(.....)" should suffice .
Image Analyst
on 22 Dec 2013
I'm not so sure. It looks like he's trying to sum a series, and that would give a single summed value. I think he wants the sum of the first 10 terms of t(n)^n/gamma(n+1). A 10 element array t is passed in and n goes from 1 to 10. At least that's how I interpret it. Why do you think he wants a vector?
Youssef Khmou
on 23 Dec 2013
it is guess, like i explained, if it was not a vector, no need for a question, a simple "sum(quantity)" is fine .
Image Analyst
on 23 Dec 2013
Well he accepted your interpretation so I guess you were right. The Ml(2) was the sum of terms 1 and 2, the Ml(3) was the sum of terms 1, 2, and 3, and the element Ml(N) was term1 + term2 + term3 + term4 +....+termN. I thought he wanted just one sum - the sum of terms 1 through term N - not N sums, but I guess I was wrong.
Youssef Khmou
on 23 Dec 2013
ok
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