Plotting trajectory in 2D

61 views (last 30 days)
Rildo
Rildo on 20 Oct 2014
Edited: Walter Roberson on 31 Oct 2017
How come this code is not resulting in a plot of the trajectory at varying angles?
function [x , y] = trajectory(Vo,O,t,g)
% Function for varying angle
x = Vo * cos(O) * t ;
y = Vo*(sin(O)*t)-(0.5*g*(t.^2));
g = 9.8;
Vo = 10;
t = (0:1:5);
for O = (0: (pi/8): pi);
[x,y] = trajectory(Vo,O,t,g);
end
plot (x,y);
hold on
end

Accepted Answer

Nick
Nick on 20 Oct 2014
Inside your function you are calling your function.You are also redefining the parameters you are sending to your function Vo, t inside the function
There might be more efficient ways but one way you could do this is take the for loop out of the function and your function would compute and plot x and y every call
function [x , y] = trajectory(Vo,O,t,g)
% Function for varying angle
x = Vo * cos(O) * t ;
y = Vo*(sin(O)*t)-(0.5*g*(t.^2));
plot (x,y);
hold on
end
then in order to call this function use
for O = (0: (pi/8): pi);
[x,y] = trajectory(10,O,[0:1:5],9.8);
end
if you want to keep that loop inside the function and just have a function call
function [x , y] = trajectory(Vo,t,g)
% Function for varying angle
for O = (0: (pi/8): pi);
x = Vo * cos(O) * t ;
y = Vo*(sin(O)*t)-(0.5*g*(t.^2));
plot (x,y);
hold on
end
end
and to call it would be
[x,y] = trajectory(10,[0:1:5],9.8);
  2 Comments
Rildo
Rildo on 20 Oct 2014
Great answer, thanks.
Phila Siffundza
Phila Siffundza on 31 Oct 2017
thank you, that really helped

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (0)

Categories

Find more on Interpolation in Help Center and File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!