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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

Simple numerical variables


In the following, we shall see how to instantiate simple variables. By simple variables, we mean scalars, vectors, and matrices. First, a scalar variable with name a is assigned the value 1 by the command:

octave:1> a=1
a = 1

That is, you write the variable name, in this case a, and then you assign a value to the variable using the equal sign. Note that in Octave, variables are not instantiated with a type specifier as it is known from C and other lower-level languages. Octave interprets a number as a real number unless you explicitly tell it otherwise1.

You can display the value of a variable simply by typing the variable name:

octave:2>a
a = 1

Let us move on and instantiate an array of numbers:

octave:3 > b = [1 2 3]
b =
1 2 3

Octave interprets this as the row vector:

(2.1)

rather than a simple one-dimensional array. The elements (or the entries) in a row vector can also be separated by commas, so the command above could have been:

octave:3> b = [1,...
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