>> R1=1;L=10e-3;C1=10e-6;R2=10; A=[{-R1/L}{-1/L};{1/C1}{-1/{R2*C1}}]; B=[{1/L};0]; C[0 1]; D=[0]; ??? A=[{-R1/L}{-1/L};{1/C1}{-1/{R2*C1}}]; | Error: Unbalanced or unexpected parenthesis or bracket.
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Answers (2)
Image Analyst
on 12 Sep 2013
1 vote
You can't just place two cells next to each other like that - you need a comma or semicolon to separate them. Try replacing }{ with }, {
2 Comments
Image Analyst
on 12 Sep 2013
Edited: Image Analyst
on 13 Sep 2013
Actually I don't know why you're using cells anyway. Why not just use parentheses so you have normal, regular numbers, not cells. Cells are not for the faint of heart beginner MATLAB programmers.
Harry
on 13 Sep 2013
Ilham Hardy
on 12 Sep 2013
I don't know what you are trying to achieve, but i think you should start with perusing this... http://matlab.wikia.com/wiki/FAQ
R1=1;
L=10e-3;
C1=10e-6;
R2=10;
A=[(-R1/L)*(-1/L);(1/C1)*(-1/(R2*C1))];
B=[(1/L);0];
C=[0 1];
D=0;
4 Comments
Harry
on 12 Sep 2013
Ilham Hardy
on 12 Sep 2013
Did you try my answer?
You need to differentiate the use of curly brackets {} and normal brackets ()
Harry
on 12 Sep 2013
Harry
on 13 Sep 2013
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