How to plot this function?

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John
John il 24 Dic 2014
Commentato: Star Strider il 24 Dic 2014
I have a function that is "vectorized". I did that because I wanted to have one such function for each value of the parameter "a":
clc;
clear all;
tic;
a=[1/2,1/3,1/4];
p = @(x) 1/3.*(exp(x.^(a))-1)./(exp(x.^(a))+1) ;
I want to have the three plots (one for each value of "a") in the same figure. However, I am having trouble isolating each function for plotting. For instance, I expected that:
p1 = @(x) p(x,1,1)
would represent one of functions, but it doesn't. My other attempts have also failed. How can I get the desired result?

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Star Strider
Star Strider il 24 Dic 2014
Modificato: Star Strider il 24 Dic 2014
The easiest way is to pass ‘a’ as a parameter as well:
a=[1/2,1/3,1/4];
p = @(x,a) 1/3.*(exp(x.^(a))-1)./(exp(x.^(a))+1) ;
p1 = p(x,a(1));
Not that within the function, ‘a’ is whatever you want it to be. If you define it as a parameter, it will not pick up the value of ‘a’ from the workspace.
  4 Commenti
John
John il 24 Dic 2014
Modificato: John il 24 Dic 2014
You've already helped a lot. But if I don't put "@(x)"I get an error message:
clc;
clear all;
tic;
a=[1/2,1/3,1/4];
p = @(x,a) 1/3.*(exp(x.^(a))-1)./(exp(x.^(a))+1) ;
p1 = p(x,a(1));
%p2 = p1(x);
Gives me:
Undefined function or variable 'x'.
Error in Untitled2 (line 9) p1 = p(x,a(1));
Star Strider
Star Strider il 24 Dic 2014
Thank you. I do my best!
Now I understand what you’re doing. If you only want it as a function of ‘x’, you have to specify it as you did:
p1 = @(x) p(x,a(1));
It all depends on how you want to call your function. There are at least a few ways to do it correctly, so choose the one that works best for you in your application. I chose the way I usually do it in my two versions of the plot call.

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