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Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson
Last activity about 15 hours ago

I can't believe someone put time into this ;-)
luca
luca
Last activity about 19 hours ago

Salve
Qualcuno ha fatto quanto segue:
utilizzando la tool box definita di matlab con oggetto--> Monopolocilindrico, su il proprio piano di massa ( reale ---> modificato da PEC a Reale) e sotto al piano del monopolo stesso, un 2 piano REALE inteso con paramtri reali, quali, costante dietterica e conducibilita elettrica di un materiale quale un terreno, per vedere come viene modificato il pattern ec ect.
Qualche risposta.
Our exportgraphics and copygraphics functions now offer direct and intuitive control over the size, padding, and aspect ratio of your exported figures.
  • Specify Output Size: Use the new Width, Height, and Units name-value pairs
  • Control Padding: Easily adjust the space around your axes using the Padding argument, or set it to to match the onscreen appearance.
  • Preserve Aspect Ratio: Use PreserveAspectRatio='on' to maintain the original plot proportions when specifying a fixed size.
  • SVG Export: The exportgraphics function now supports exporting to the SVG file format.
Check out the full article on the Graphics and App Building blog for examples and details: Advanced Control of Size and Layout of Exported Graphics
Hi everyone
I've been using ThingSpeak for several years now without an issue until last Thursday.
I have four ThingSpeak channels which are used by three Arduino devices (in two locations/on two distinct networks) all running the same code.
All three devices stopped being able to write data to my ThingSpeak channels around 17:00 CET on 4 Dec and are still unable to.
Nothing changed on this side, let alone something that would explain the problem.
I would note that data can still be written to all the channels via a browser so there is no fundamental problem with the channels (such as being full).
Since the above date and time, any HTTP/1.1 'update' (write) requests via the REST API (using both simple one-write GET requests or bulk JSON POST requests) are timing out after 5 seconds and no data is being written. The 5 second timeout is my Arduino code's default, but even increasing it to 30 seconds makes no difference. Before all this, responses from ThingSpeak were sub-second.
I have recompiled the Arduino code using the latest libraries and that didn't help.
I have tested the same code again another random api (api.ipify.org) and that works just fine.
Curl works just fine too, also usng HTTP/1.1
So the issue appears to be something particular to the combination of my Arduino code *and* the ThingSpeak environment, where something changed on the ThingSpeak end at the above date and time.
If anyone in the community has any suggestions as to what might be going on, I would greatly appreciate the help.
Peter
I believe that it is very useful and important to know when we have new comments of our own problems. Although I had chosen to receive notifications about my own problems, I only receive them when I am mentioned by @.
Is it possible to add a 'New comment' alert in front of each problem on the 'My Problems' page?
The formula comes from @yuruyurau. (https://x.com/yuruyurau)
digital life 1
figure('Position',[300,50,900,900], 'Color','k');
axes(gcf, 'NextPlot','add', 'Position',[0,0,1,1], 'Color','k');
axis([0, 400, 0, 400])
SHdl = scatter([], [], 2, 'filled','o','w', 'MarkerEdgeColor','none', 'MarkerFaceAlpha',.4);
t = 0;
i = 0:2e4;
x = mod(i, 100);
y = floor(i./100);
k = x./4 - 12.5;
e = y./9 + 5;
o = vecnorm([k; e])./9;
while true
t = t + pi/90;
q = x + 99 + tan(1./k) + o.*k.*(cos(e.*9)./4 + cos(y./2)).*sin(o.*4 - t);
c = o.*e./30 - t./8;
SHdl.XData = (q.*0.7.*sin(c)) + 9.*cos(y./19 + t) + 200;
SHdl.YData = 200 + (q./2.*cos(c));
drawnow
end
digital life 2
figure('Position',[300,50,900,900], 'Color','k');
axes(gcf, 'NextPlot','add', 'Position',[0,0,1,1], 'Color','k');
axis([0, 400, 0, 400])
SHdl = scatter([], [], 2, 'filled','o','w', 'MarkerEdgeColor','none', 'MarkerFaceAlpha',.4);
t = 0;
i = 0:1e4;
x = i;
y = i./235;
e = y./8 - 13;
while true
t = t + pi/240;
k = (4 + sin(y.*2 - t).*3).*cos(x./29);
d = vecnorm([k; e]);
q = 3.*sin(k.*2) + 0.3./k + sin(y./25).*k.*(9 + 4.*sin(e.*9 - d.*3 + t.*2));
SHdl.XData = q + 30.*cos(d - t) + 200;
SHdl.YData = 620 - q.*sin(d - t) - d.*39;
drawnow
end
digital life 3
figure('Position',[300,50,900,900], 'Color','k');
axes(gcf, 'NextPlot','add', 'Position',[0,0,1,1], 'Color','k');
axis([0, 400, 0, 400])
SHdl = scatter([], [], 1, 'filled','o','w', 'MarkerEdgeColor','none', 'MarkerFaceAlpha',.4);
t = 0;
i = 0:1e4;
x = mod(i, 200);
y = i./43;
k = 5.*cos(x./14).*cos(y./30);
e = y./8 - 13;
d = (k.^2 + e.^2)./59 + 4;
a = atan2(k, e);
while true
t = t + pi/20;
q = 60 - 3.*sin(a.*e) + k.*(3 + 4./d.*sin(d.^2 - t.*2));
c = d./2 + e./99 - t./18;
SHdl.XData = q.*sin(c) + 200;
SHdl.YData = (q + d.*9).*cos(c) + 200;
drawnow; pause(1e-2)
end
digital life 4
figure('Position',[300,50,900,900], 'Color','k');
axes(gcf, 'NextPlot','add', 'Position',[0,0,1,1], 'Color','k');
axis([0, 400, 0, 400])
SHdl = scatter([], [], 1, 'filled','o','w', 'MarkerEdgeColor','none', 'MarkerFaceAlpha',.4);
t = 0;
i = 0:4e4;
x = mod(i, 200);
y = i./200;
k = x./8 - 12.5;
e = y./8 - 12.5;
o = (k.^2 + e.^2)./169;
d = .5 + 5.*cos(o);
while true
t = t + pi/120;
SHdl.XData = x + d.*k.*sin(d.*2 + o + t) + e.*cos(e + t) + 100;
SHdl.YData = y./4 - o.*135 + d.*6.*cos(d.*3 + o.*9 + t) + 275;
SHdl.CData = ((d.*sin(k).*sin(t.*4 + e)).^2).'.*[1,1,1];
drawnow;
end
digital life 5
figure('Position',[300,50,900,900], 'Color','k');
axes(gcf, 'NextPlot','add', 'Position',[0,0,1,1], 'Color','k');
axis([0, 400, 0, 400])
SHdl = scatter([], [], 1, 'filled','o','w',...
'MarkerEdgeColor','none', 'MarkerFaceAlpha',.4);
t = 0;
i = 0:1e4;
x = mod(i, 200);
y = i./55;
k = 9.*cos(x./8);
e = y./8 - 12.5;
while true
t = t + pi/120;
d = (k.^2 + e.^2)./99 + sin(t)./6 + .5;
q = 99 - e.*sin(atan2(k, e).*7)./d + k.*(3 + cos(d.^2 - t).*2);
c = d./2 + e./69 - t./16;
SHdl.XData = q.*sin(c) + 200;
SHdl.YData = (q + 19.*d).*cos(c) + 200;
drawnow;
end
digital life 6
clc; clear
figure('Position',[300,50,900,900], 'Color','k');
axes(gcf, 'NextPlot','add', 'Position',[0,0,1,1], 'Color','k');
axis([0, 400, 0, 400])
SHdl = scatter([], [], 2, 'filled','o','w', 'MarkerEdgeColor','none', 'MarkerFaceAlpha',.4);
t = 0;
i = 1:1e4;
y = i./790;
k = y; idx = y < 5;
k(idx) = 6 + sin(bitxor(floor(y(idx)), 1)).*6;
k(~idx) = 4 + cos(y(~idx));
while true
t = t + pi/90;
d = sqrt((k.*cos(i + t./4)).^2 + (y/3-13).^2);
q = y.*k.*cos(i + t./4)./5.*(2 + sin(d.*2 + y - t.*4));
c = d./3 - t./2 + mod(i, 2);
SHdl.XData = q + 90.*cos(c) + 200;
SHdl.YData = 400 - (q.*sin(c) + d.*29 - 170);
drawnow; pause(1e-2)
end
digital life 7
clc; clear
figure('Position',[300,50,900,900], 'Color','k');
axes(gcf, 'NextPlot','add', 'Position',[0,0,1,1], 'Color','k');
axis([0, 400, 0, 400])
SHdl = scatter([], [], 2, 'filled','o','w', 'MarkerEdgeColor','none', 'MarkerFaceAlpha',.4);
t = 0;
i = 1:1e4;
y = i./345;
x = y; idx = y < 11;
x(idx) = 6 + sin(bitxor(floor(x(idx)), 8))*6;
x(~idx) = x(~idx)./5 + cos(x(~idx)./2);
e = y./7 - 13;
while true
t = t + pi/120;
k = x.*cos(i - t./4);
d = sqrt(k.^2 + e.^2) + sin(e./4 + t)./2;
q = y.*k./d.*(3 + sin(d.*2 + y./2 - t.*4));
c = d./2 + 1 - t./2;
SHdl.XData = q + 60.*cos(c) + 200;
SHdl.YData = 400 - (q.*sin(c) + d.*29 - 170);
drawnow; pause(5e-3)
end
digital life 8
clc; clear
figure('Position',[300,50,900,900], 'Color','k');
axes(gcf, 'NextPlot','add', 'Position',[0,0,1,1], 'Color','k');
axis([0, 400, 0, 400])
SHdl{6} = [];
for j = 1:6
SHdl{j} = scatter([], [], 2, 'filled','o','w', 'MarkerEdgeColor','none', 'MarkerFaceAlpha',.3);
end
t = 0;
i = 1:2e4;
k = mod(i, 25) - 12;
e = i./800; m = 200;
theta = pi/3;
R = [cos(theta) -sin(theta); sin(theta) cos(theta)];
while true
t = t + pi/240;
d = 7.*cos(sqrt(k.^2 + e.^2)./3 + t./2);
XY = [k.*4 + d.*k.*sin(d + e./9 + t);
e.*2 - d.*9 - d.*9.*cos(d + t)];
for j = 1:6
XY = R*XY;
SHdl{j}.XData = XY(1,:) + m;
SHdl{j}.YData = XY(2,:) + m;
end
drawnow;
end
digital life 9
clc; clear
figure('Position',[300,50,900,900], 'Color','k');
axes(gcf, 'NextPlot','add', 'Position',[0,0,1,1], 'Color','k');
axis([0, 400, 0, 400])
SHdl{14} = [];
for j = 1:14
SHdl{j} = scatter([], [], 2, 'filled','o','w', 'MarkerEdgeColor','none', 'MarkerFaceAlpha',.1);
end
t = 0;
i = 1:2e4;
k = mod(i, 50) - 25;
e = i./1100; m = 200;
theta = pi/7;
R = [cos(theta) -sin(theta); sin(theta) cos(theta)];
while true
t = t + pi/240;
d = 5.*cos(sqrt(k.^2 + e.^2) - t + mod(i, 2));
XY = [k + k.*d./6.*sin(d + e./3 + t);
90 + e.*d - e./d.*2.*cos(d + t)];
for j = 1:14
XY = R*XY;
SHdl{j}.XData = XY(1,:) + m;
SHdl{j}.YData = XY(2,:) + m;
end
drawnow;
end
Heavenly
Heavenly
Last activity on 26 Nov 2025 at 20:57

Hello everyone,
My name is heavnely, studying Aerospace Enginerring in IIT Kharagpur. I'm trying to meet people that can help to explore about things in control systems, drones, UAV, Reseearch. I have started wrting papers an year ago and hopefully it is going fine. I hope someone would reply to reply to this messege.
Thank you so much for anyone who read my messege.
The challenge:
You are given a string of lowercase letters 'a' to 'z'.
Each character represents a base-26 digit:
  • 'a' = 0
1. Understand the Base-26 Conversion Process:
Let the input be s = 'aloha'.
Convert each character to a digit:
digits = double(s) - double('a');
This works because:
double('a') = 97
double('b') = 98
So:
double('a') - 97 = 0
double('l') - 97 = 11
double('o') - 97 = 14
double('h') - 97 = 7
double('a') - 97 = 0
Now you have:
[0 11 14 7 0]
2. Interpret as Base-26:
For a number with n digits:
d1 d2 d3 ... dn
Value = d1*26^(n-1) + d2*26^(n-2) + ... + dn*26^0
So for 'aloha' (5 chars):
0*26^4 + 11*26^3 + 14*26^2 + 7*26^1 + 0*26^0
MATLAB can compute this automatically.
3. Avoid loops — Use MATLAB vectorization:
You can compute the weighted sum using dot
digits = double(s) - 'a';
powers = 26.^(length(s)-1:-1:0);
result = dot(digits, powers);
This is clean, short, and vectorized.
4.Test with the examples:
char2num26('funfunfun')
→ 1208856210289
char2num26('matlab')
→ 142917893
char2num26('nasa')
→ 228956
Martinov
Martinov
Last activity on 26 Nov 2025 at 14:24

Hello,
I have Arduino DIY Geiger Counter, that uploads data to my channel here in ThingSpeak (3171809), using ESP8266 WiFi board. It sends CPM values (counts per minute), Dose, VCC and Max CPM for 24h. They are assignet to Field from 1 to 4 respectively. How can I duplicate Field 1, so I could create different time chart for the same measured unit? Or should I duplicate Field 1 chart, and how? I tried to find the answer here in the blog, but I couldn't.
I have to say that I'm not an engineer or coder, just can simply load some Arduino sketches and few more things, so I'll be very thankfull if someone could explain like for non-IT users.
Regards,
Emo
Thank you to everyone who attended the workshop A Hands-On Introduction to Reinforcement Learning! Now that you all have had some time to digest the content, I wanted to create a thread where you could ask any further questions, share insights, or discuss how you're applying the concepts to your work. Please feel free to share your thoughts in the thread below! And for your reference, I have attached a PDF version of the workshop presentation slides to this post.
If you were interested in joining the RL workshop but weren't able to attend live (maybe because you were in one of our other fantastic workshops instead!), you can find the workshop hands-on material in this shared MATLAB Drive folder. To access the exercises, simply download the MATLAB Project Archive (.mlproj) file or copy it to your MATLAB Drive, extract the files, and open the project (.prj). Each exercise has its own live script (.mlx file) which contains all the instructions and individual steps for each exercise. Happy (reinforcement) learning!
Is it possible to get the slides from the Hands-On-Workshops?
I can't find them in the proceedings. I'm particularly interested in the Reinforcement Learning workshop, but unfortunately I couldn't participate.
Thanks in advance!
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson
Last activity on 19 Nov 2025 at 20:42

@Cody Team, how can I vote or give a like in great comments?
It seems that there are not such options.
To track the current leader after each match, you can use cumulative scores. First, calculate the cumulative sum for each player across the matches. Then, after eaayer with the highest score.
Hint: Use cumsum(S, 1) to get cumulative scores along the rows (matches). Loop through each row to keep track of the leader. If multiple players tie, pick the lowest index.
Example:
If S = [5 3 4; 2 6 2; 3 5 7], after match 3, the cumulative scores are [10 14 13]. Player 2 leads with 14 hilbs.
This method keeps your code clean and avoids repeatedly summing rows.
Developing an application in MATLAB often feels like a natural choice: it offers a unified environment, powerful visualization tools, accessible syntax, and a robust technical ecosystem. But when the goal is to build a compilable, distributable app, the path becomes unexpectedly difficult if your workflow depends on symbolic functions like sym, zeta, or lambertw.
This isn’t a minor technical inconvenience—it’s a structural contradiction. MATLAB encourages the creation of graphical interfaces, input validation, and dynamic visualization. It even provides an Application Compiler to package your code. But the moment you invoke sym, the compiler fails. No clear warning. No workaround. Just: you cannot compile. The same applies to zeta and lambertw, which rely on the symbolic toolbox.
So we’re left asking: how can a platform designed for scientific and technical applications block compilation of functions that are central to those very disciplines?
What Are the Alternatives?
  • Rewrite everything numerically, avoiding symbolic logic—often impractical for advanced mathematical workflows.
  • Use partial workarounds like matlabFunction, which may work but rarely preserve the original logic or flexibility.
  • Switch platforms (e.g., Python with SymPy, Julia), which means rebuilding the architecture and leaving behind MATLAB’s ecosystem.
So, Is MATLAB Still Worth It?
That’s the real question. MATLAB remains a powerful tool for prototyping, teaching, analysis, and visualization. But when it comes to building compilable apps that rely on symbolic computation, the platform imposes limits that contradict its promise.
Is it worth investing time in a MATLAB app if you can’t compile it due to essential mathematical functions? Should MathWorks address this contradiction? Or is it time to rethink our tools?
I’d love to hear your thoughts. Is MATLAB still worth it for serious application development?
Great material, examples and skillfully guided. And, of course, very useful.
Thanks!
Matt Tearle
Matt Tearle
Last activity on 26 Nov 2025 at 14:42

Congratulations to all the Cool Coders who have completed the problem set. I hope you weren't too cool to enjoy the silliness I put into the problems.
If you've solved the whole problem set, don't forget to help out your teammates with suggestions, tips, tricks, etc. But also, just for fun, I'm curious to see which of my many in-jokes and nerdy references you noticed. Many of the problems were inspired by things in the real world, then ported over into the chaotic fantasy world of Nedland.
I guess I'll start with the obvious real-world reference: @Ned Gulley (I make no comment about his role as insane despot in any universe, real or otherwise.)
Athi
Athi
Last activity on 17 Nov 2025 at 15:33

Extracting the digits of a number will be useful to solve many Cody problems.
Instead of iteratively dividing by 10 and taking the remainder, the digits of a number can be easily extracted using String operations.
%Extract the digits of N
N = 1234;
d = num2str(N)-'0';
d =
1 2 3 4
Cephas
Cephas
Last activity on 17 Nov 2025 at 10:25

Instead of looping with if-statements, use logical indexing:
A(A < 0) = 0;
One line, no loops, full clarity.
Cephas
Cephas
Last activity on 17 Nov 2025 at 3:49

Whenever a problem repeats in cycles (like indexing or angles), mod() keeps your logic clean:
idx = mod(i-1, n) + 1;
No if-else chaos!