Matrices with MATLAB (Taken from "MATLAB for Beginners: A Gentle Approach")
By Peter Kattan
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About this ebook
This concise article of forty pages takes you on a short tour on how to handle matrices using MATLAB. Topics covered include how to generate matrices in MATLAB, different operations on matrices, and how to handle matrix, vector, and scalar quantities. Various MATLAB functions associated with matrices are also explored. At the end of the presentation, a small section is devoted to symbolic computing with matrices using the MATLAB Symbolic Math Toolbox. The presentation is made in the form of solved examples showing the exact MATLAB commands used and the output. At the end of the article, there are about 54 unsolved exercises for students to practice. The solutions to all the exercises are also provided. This article is taken form the bestselling book "MATLAB for Beginners: A Gentle Approach."
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Matrices with MATLAB (Taken from "MATLAB for Beginners - Peter Kattan
Matrices with MATLAB
Taken from the Book MATLAB for Beginners: A Gentle Approach
Peter I. Kattan
tmp_f4ca8dfcb3e06fc71ac29bb553959373_X_rfMq_html_m776dd5ff.pngPetra Books
www.PetraBooks.com
Copyright
Peter I. Kattan, PhD
Correspondence about this article may be sent to the author at one of the following two email addresses:
pkattan@alumni.lsu.edu
pkattan@tedata.net.jo
Matrices with MATLAB. Taken from the Book MATLAB for Beginners: A Gentle Approach
.
Written by Peter I. Kattan.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be copied or reproduced without written permission of the author or publisher.
© 2011 Peter I. Kattan
Smashwords Edition
Preface
This concise article of forty pages takes you on a short tour on how to handle matrices using MATLAB. Topics covered include how to generate matrices in MATLAB, different operations on matrices, and how to handle matrix, vector, and scalar quantities. Various MATLAB functions associated with matrices are also explored. At the end of the presentation, a small section is devoted to symbolic computing with matrices using the MATLAB Symbolic Math Toolbox. The presentation is made in the form of solved examples showing the exact MATLAB commands used and the output. At the end of the article, there are about 54 unsolved exercises for students to practice. The solutions to all the exercises are also provided. This article is taken form the bestselling book MATLAB for Beginners: A Gentle Approach.
Table of Contents:
Matrices
Exercises
Solutions to Exercises
References
MATLAB Books
Installation of MATLAB
Footnotes
Matrices with MATLAB
In this article we introduce matrices and how to deal with them in MATLAB. Matrices are stored as two-dimensional arrays[1] in MATLAB. A matrix is a collection of numbers and/or scalars arranged in rows and columns. For example here is a matrix of numbers with three rows and four columns:
>> x = [2 1 -3 0 ; -2 3 4 1 ; 5 -2 1 3]
x =
2 1 -3 0
-2 3 4