How to Code two Variable Feval??
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I want to code a function that has two varibles in it but one of those variables a function.
Mainly HX = ....
and K1...
I attempted feval but it doesn't work so it put it back into typical math format
Inputs:
f = @(x,y) (x^2)+(y^2);
a = 2;
b = 2.2;
c = x;
d = 2*x;
n = 4;
m = 4;
function [di, i] = doubsimpint(f,a,b,c,d,m,n)
syms x y
h = (b - a)/n;
J1 = 0;
J2 = 0;
J3 = 0;
for i = 1:n
x = a + i*h;
HX = (feval(d,x) - feval(c,x))/m; %d(x) c(x)
K1 = feval(f,x,feval(c,x)) + feval(f,x,feval(d,x)); %f(x,c(x)) + f(x,d(x))
K2 = 0;
K3 = 0;
for j = 1:(m-1)
y = feval(c,x)+j*HX;
Q = feval(f,x,y);
if rem(j, 2) == 0 %if j is even
K2 = K2 + Q;
else
K3 = K3 + Q;
end
end
L = (K1 +2*K2 + 4*K3)*HX/3;
if i == 0 || i == n
J1 = J1 + L;
elseif rem(i, 2) == 0
J2 = J2 + L;
else
J3 = J3 + L;
end
end
J = h*(J1 + 2*J2 + 4*J3)/3;
di = J;
end
6 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 7 Nov 2019
Q = feval(f,x,y);
is valid syntax for feval a function that takes at least two parameters.
feval() is not used much now; it is only suitable for the case where your f might be a character vector or string object that gives the name of a function. In pretty much all modern cases you should be passing around function handles instead of names of functions.
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