Capturing outputs from Loops
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Joe Bannen
el 25 de Oct. de 2016
Comentada: Steven Lord
el 25 de Oct. de 2016
Hi
I have produced some code but now need to look at how it performs under various changes in input. This (I hope!) is best done by using loops. Capturing the various outputs and plotting them is where I am stuck!
for n=1:0.1:10
% Various Functions
error1=
error2=
end
error1 and error2 are produced and work well in isolation. I need to vary n and capture error1 and error2 for each n. Plotting error1 and error2 against n would be the end target.
I can't quite see how to do this!
Any help in how to do this would be very welcome. How to measure and capture the tic/toc for each n would be useful as well.
Cheers
Joe
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Respuesta aceptada
Alexandra Harkai
el 25 de Oct. de 2016
To keep track of error1/2 and times, you can maintain an array for each of them:
error1 = zeros(91,1);
error2 = zeros(91,1);
time = zeros(91,1);
for n=1:0.1:10
tic;
% Various Functions
m = n*10-9;
t(m) = toc;
error1(m)= <first error>;
error2(m)= <second error>;
end
plot([error1, error2, t]);
Since n is not always an integer, m=n*10-9 gives an integer indexing.
1 comentario
Steven Lord
el 25 de Oct. de 2016
Rather than multiply a decimal number to get an index (which does NOT always work) consider iterating over a vector of integer values and transforming the elements of that vector into a decimal.
for n = 1:0.1:5
n2 = 10*n-9;
disp([n, n2])
if n2 ~= round(n2)
fprintf('10*(%g)-9 returns %d%+g.\n', n, round(n2), n2-round(n2));
end
end
Compare with:
for n2 = 1:41
n = (n2+9)/10;
disp([n, n2])
if n2 ~= round(n2)
fprintf('10*(%g)-9 returns %d%+g.\n', n, round(n2), n2-round(n2));
end
end
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