cross product is wrong
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>> A
A =
-2159/277
-27/2
0
>> B
B=
-579/104
-135/14
0
>> cross(A,B)
ans =
0
0
-1/70368744177664
A and B vectors are parallel. cross product must "0". But answer is wrong. Can you help me?
3 Commenti
Paul
il 6 Ago 2021
Modificato: Paul
il 6 Ago 2021
In the first instance, A is a double and in the second instance A is a sym object. I was using the Symbolic Math Toolbox to determine if the problem you're seeing is just a rounding error. But the data provided in the question for A and B doesn't yield the result in the question using either symbolic or numeric math:
syms A B
A = sym([-2159/277 -27/2 0]);
B = sym([-579/104 -135/14 0]);
vpa(cross(A,B))
cross(double(A),double(B))
So the symbolic math and the numeric math basically give the same result, neither of which match the result in the question:
-1/70368744177664
Risposte (2)
Rik
il 5 Ago 2021
Modificato: Rik
il 5 Ago 2021
1/70368744177664
eps
This number is so small that you can assume this is a rounding error.
The root cause of this rounding error is that it is not possible to store infinite decimals in finite computer memory.
Imagine you can only store decimal numbers, and only 4 digits after the decimal point.
(1/3)*3 = (0.3333)*3 = 0.9999
Is * wrong? Or /? Yes and no. You just need to be aware of the limitations of the tools you're using.
2 Commenti
Rik
il 6 Ago 2021
Then compare to a tolerance:
val=1/70368744177664;
target=0;
tol=1e-10;
if abs(val-target)<=tol
Jan
il 6 Ago 2021
Geogebra treats the dta as symbolical expressions. Matlab converts -2159/277 to a numericalvalues as default. If you want to use symbolic calculations, use sym().
Do not check numerical floating point values to be exactly 0 in a condition of an if command. Calculations with numerical values include rounding effects, which cannot be neglected:
1e17 + 1 - 1e17 % 0
1e17 - 1e17 + 1 % 1
sin(2 * pi) % -2.4493e-16
...
There are no well defined fixed limits and it depends on the application what you have to "consider as 0".
A numerical algorithm requires an analysis of the rounding effects to estimate the reliability of the result.
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