How to terminate an if-elseif-else statement once a condition is met.
25 visualizaciones (últimos 30 días)
Mostrar comentarios más antiguos
Gideon Idumah
el 11 de Nov. de 2018
Comentada: Gideon Idumah
el 14 de Nov. de 2018
I want a situation whereby if the first 'if' statement is true (norm_sn <= del), the code should calculate x_plus and exit the if condition (jump to calculate f_x), or if the 'if' statement is false and the 'elseif' statement is true (del <= norm_s_cp), the code should calculate x_plus and exit the if statements (jump to calculate f_x). if none of the first two is true, then it can calculate the 'else'. I want it to be in that order. Can someone help me out. Thank you.
function [x_plus,grad,norm_grad,f_x,f_xplus,m_xplus] = dogleg(f,x,del)
syms x_1 x_2 aux
grad = subs(gradient(f,[x_1,x_2]),[x_1,x_2],x');
norm_grad = norm(grad);
H = subs(hessian(f,[x_1,x_2]),[x_1,x_2],x');
%
s_n = -H^-1*grad; norm_sn = norm(s_n);
lambda_star1 = norm_grad^2/(grad'*H*grad);
s_cp = -lambda_star1*grad; norm_s_cp = norm(s_cp);
if norm_sn <= del
x_plus = x + s_n;
elseif del <= norm_s_cp
x_plus = x - (del/norm_grad)*grad;
else
gamma = norm_grad^4/((grad'*H*grad)*(grad'*abs(s_n)));
%gamma = norm_s_cp*norm(grad)/grad'*abs(s_n);
eta = 0.8*gamma + 0.2;
s_ncap = eta*s_n;
lambda = solve(norm(s_cp + aux*(s_ncap - s_cp))^2 == del^2);
x_plus = x + s_cp + lambda(lambda>0)*(s_ncap - s_cp);
end
f_x = subs(f,[x_1,x_2],x');
f_xplus = subs(f,[x_1,x_2],x_plus');
m_xplus = f_x + grad'*(x_plus - x) + 0.5*(x_plus - x)'*H*(x_plus - x);
end
4 comentarios
Walter Roberson
el 11 de Nov. de 2018
That already happens for numeric values. And you do not have a loop.
However without knowing the f, we cannot tell whether the norm is certain to be convertible to numeric. If the norm turns out to involve symbolic variables then the comparison could invoke an error.
Rik
el 11 de Nov. de 2018
if...elseif...else...end is not a loop. If you want something to happen under some condition, make sure you have that as a test. See the example below for what happens when conditions overlap.
cond1=true;cond2=true;
if cond1 && cond2
disp(1)
elseif cond1
disp(2)
elseif cond2
disp(3)
else
disp(4)
end
Respuesta aceptada
Image Analyst
el 12 de Nov. de 2018
I don't see a loop but if there were, you could put a "break" statement there. As it is, you can put a "return" statement wherever you want to exit the function immediately, as long as all the output variables have been assigned.
Más respuestas (0)
Ver también
Categorías
Más información sobre Loops and Conditional Statements en Help Center y File Exchange.
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!