taylor expanssion calculation result is wrong

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function [SN] = sintaylorfunction(A, tol)
k = 0;
error = 0 ;
sin = 0;
SN = sin;
sinplus1 = 0;
SM = sinplus1;
while E <= tol
sin = (-1)^k * A^(2*k+1)/factorial(2*k+1);
SN = SN + sin;
sinplus1 = (-1)^(k+1) * A^(2*(k+1)+1)/factorial(2*(k+1)+1);
SM = SM + sinplus1;
error= abs( max(SM - SN));
end
end
I wrote the sin function in this way. When I calculate sin(pi/2), I get sin(pi/2) = 1.5708. However, we know that sin(pi/2) = 1. Where is my mistake in my function?

Accepted Answer

Ameer Hamza
Ameer Hamza on 3 Nov 2020
Edited: Ameer Hamza on 3 Nov 2020
kou are not incrementing 'k' inside the while-loop. Also, the while-condition is incorrect. Try the following code
sintaylorfunction(pi/2, 0.01)
function [SN] = sintaylorfunction(A, tol)
k = 0;
error = inf;
sin = 0;
SN = sin;
sinplus1 = 0;
SM = sinplus1;
while error >= tol
sin = (-1)^k * A^(2*k+1)/factorial(2*k+1);
SN = SN + sin;
sinplus1 = (-1)^(k+1) * A^(2*(k+1)+1)/factorial(2*(k+1)+1);
SM = SM + sinplus1;
error= abs( max(SM - SN));
k = k+1;
end
end
  6 Comments
Zeynep Toprak
Zeynep Toprak on 4 Nov 2020
many thanks dear Hamza. I see my missings.

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More Answers (1)

Steven Lord
Steven Lord on 3 Nov 2020
Edited: Steven Lord on 3 Nov 2020
I want to walk through your code and comment on a few places.
function [SN] = sintaylorfunction(A, tol)
k = 0;
error = 0 ;
Don't create a variable named error. That identifier already has a meaning in MATLAB.
sin = 0;
The identifier sin also already has a meaning in MATLAB, so I recommend you choose a different variable name.
SN = sin;
sinplus1 = 0;
SM = sinplus1;
while E <= tol
The variable E doesn't exist.
sin = (-1)^k * A^(2*k+1)/factorial(2*k+1);
From the role this plays, a better name might be term.
SN = SN + sin;
sinplus1 = (-1)^(k+1) * A^(2*(k+1)+1)/factorial(2*(k+1)+1);
SM = SM + sinplus1;
error= abs( max(SM - SN));
In this loop you change neither the (nonexistent) variable E nor the variable tol. So if this were to enter the loop, you'd never exit.
FYI, you might want to check your answer using the funm function to compute the matrix cosine and matrix sine.

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