solve a set of two linear equations

Hello,
I have a set of two linear equations. I know how to solve it on paper. The only issue is how to make a well-structured code for it by using function handels (so without using symolic variables). Let's consider the following example:
f1 = @(x,y) y - x - a(x) - b(y) + cst1 ;
f2 = @(x,y) y - x - c(x) - d(y) + cst2 ;
a and c are functions of x, b and d functions of y, cst 1 and cst 2 are constants.
Thanks in advance for your help.

Risposte (2)

Steven Lord
Steven Lord il 1 Ott 2021

0 voti

If this isn't a homework assignment, use fsolve from Optimization Toolbox.
If this is a homework assignment, check your textbook to see if there is an algorithm and/or pseudocode that you can implement as MATLAB code. If there is but you aren't sure where to start because you're not familiar with how to write MATLAB code, I suggest you start with the free MATLAB Onramp tutorial (https://www.mathworks.com/support/learn-with-matlab-tutorials.html) to quickly learn the essentials of MATLAB.

1 Commento

No, it is not a homework and I am familiar with Matlab. The only problem is that I dont see how to use fsolve with function handels (f1 = @(x,y) ... and f2 = @(x,y) ...). Here: https://nl.mathworks.com/help/optim/ug/fsolve.html, for instance F1 and F2 are not function handles. I want to use function handle for the sake of clarity of the code (as each equation includes many terms depending on x and y like a(x) or b(y) in the above example). I dont want to use symbolic parameters neither. Is there any way to use fsolve with my f1(x,y) and f2(x,y) ?

Accedi per commentare.

Alan Weiss
Alan Weiss il 3 Ott 2021
Modificato: Alan Weiss il 3 Ott 2021

0 voti

I don't really understand what you are trying to do, but it sounds to me like your best bet is to use the Problem-Based Optimization Workflow or more specifically the Problem-Based Workflow for Solving Equations. You can write your optimization variables with perfect clarity, and your will get the same underlying solver (fsolve) if it is appropriate.
Alan Weiss
MATLAB mathematical toolbox documentation

Prodotti

Release

R2021a

Richiesto:

il 1 Ott 2021

Modificato:

il 3 Ott 2021

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by