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GNU Octave Beginner's Guide

You're reading from   GNU Octave Beginner's Guide Become a proficient Octave user by learning this high-level scientific numerical tool from the ground up

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2011
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849513326
Length 280 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Jesper Schmidt Hansen Jesper Schmidt Hansen
Author Profile Icon Jesper Schmidt Hansen
Jesper Schmidt Hansen
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

GNU Octave
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
1. www.PacktPub.com
2. Preface
1. Introducing GNU Octave FREE CHAPTER 2. Interacting with Octave: Variables and Operators 3. Working with Octave: Functions and Plotting 4. Rationalizing: Octave Scripts 5. Extensions: Write Your Own Octave Functions 6. Making Your Own Package: A Poisson Equation Solver 7. More Examples: Data Analysis 8. Need for Speed: Optimization and Dynamically Linked Functions Pop quiz - Answers

Saving your work


If you use script45.m to compute a very long sequence of primes, it would probably be a good idea to save the variable prime_sequence to avoid calculating the sequence again. Saving variables in Octave is easy. Simply use:

octave:44> save primes.mat prime_sequence

to save prime_sequence in a file called primes.mat. If you want to save more than one variable, you just write all the variable names after the file name. The general syntax is:

save option1 option2 filename variable1 variable2 ...

where option1 option2 specifies the file format, filename is the name of the file (for example, primes.mat in Command 44) and variable1 variable2 ... is the list of variables that you wish to save. You can use wildcards to save all variables with a specific pattern, for example, if variable1 is given as primes*, all variables with prefix primes will be saved. If you do not specify any variables, all variables in the current workspace are saved.

Note

In Command 44, I have used the...

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