Plot 2D constraints

I have an equation (a-b)x+(c-b)y <= d and i would like to plot 20 instances of this equation.
The limits of the plot are set from -5 to 5. I have already a set of values for the a,b,c,d
Any ideas?
My code so far is:
x = [-5:0.1:5];
L = 20;
hold off
for i=1:L
y = (d-x*(a-b))/(c-b)
plot(x,y)
hold on
end

1 Commento

Gani
Gani il 28 Giu 2019
Modificato: Gani il 28 Giu 2019
You are not changing the values of Y inside the loop. Hence you will get same plot in each iteration.

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Risposte (1)

Star Strider
Star Strider il 28 Giu 2019
You do not need the loop.
Try this:
x = linspace(-5, 5, 20);
L = 20;
y = (d-x*(a-b))/(c-b);
plot(x,y)

4 Commenti

Jack Haratsi
Jack Haratsi il 28 Giu 2019
Thank you for your answer but I think i expressed my question wrong.
The variables a,b,c,d are described by vectors of 20 elements each.
For each x,y variable, the equation should be given by a line in an x,y plot and that's why i used the loop.
The x,y are to be ploted in order to graph the blue lines showcased below:
Annotation 2019-06-28 162333.png
Star Strider
Star Strider il 28 Giu 2019
My pleasure.
Yes, you did.
Knowing what a, b, c, and d are, and how they relate to the lines you want to plot, would help immensely. Are they the respective ends of the lines? Are they slopes and intercepts? Something else?
Jack Haratsi
Jack Haratsi il 28 Giu 2019
They should be the ends of the lines. They should be treated as ''constraints'' that determine the domain at which i have a feasible solution.
Right now, my plot looks something like that, and i am not sure if it is correct:
untitled.jpg
Star Strider
Star Strider il 28 Giu 2019
Modificato: Star Strider il 28 Giu 2019
What are the ends of the lines?
How should the lines be defined in terms of a, b, c, and d?
EDIT —
Should they be plotted as:
plot([a(:) b(:)]', [c(:) d(:)]')
Note that this will produce the series of straight lines that you likely want. The question is how to assign the vectors to the matrices here.

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Richiesto:

il 28 Giu 2019

Modificato:

il 28 Giu 2019

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