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Sum(X) = 1 but Sum(X)==1 produces logical 0

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George
George el 22 de Jul. de 2014
Comentada: George el 22 de Jul. de 2014
Can someone please explain this?
sum([Node(temp).pbelief])
ans =
1.0000
K>> sum([Node(temp).pbelief])==1
ans =
0
By the way:
Node(temp(1)).pbelief
ans =
0.0024
K>> Node(temp(2)).pbelief
ans =
0.9976

Respuesta aceptada

Namita Vishnubhotla
Namita Vishnubhotla el 22 de Jul. de 2014
This does not seem like a limitation/bug in MATLAB. Use the long fixed decimal format before displaying your values:
>> format long
There is a possibility for a discrepancy in the values.
For example, sum([Node(temp).pbelief]) could actually hold 1.0000100, in which case the equality condition is bound to fail.
You could also use "format hex" to view the hexadecimal representation of your sum, and compare it to the hexadecimal representation of 1.
In general, it is not advisable to compare the equality of two values directly, as you have done in this case. It is better to compare their difference to a small predefined tolerance value.
>> abs(sum([Node(temp).pbelief]) – 1) <= 0.0001
  1 comentario
George
George el 22 de Jul. de 2014
Thanks. It was indeed a precision issue.
Solved by using your command

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Más respuestas (2)

Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski el 22 de Jul. de 2014

James Tursa
James Tursa el 22 de Jul. de 2014
Note that when a number is exactly an integer, and you are only printing one scalar value, MATLAB prints it without any trailing 0's. But if the number is not exactly an integer, MATLAB will print trailing 0's, indicating that there is a non-zero digit down the line somewhere even if it is not printed to the screen. E.g.,
>> format short
>> 1
ans =
1
>> 1.0000001
ans =
1.0000

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