1985 All American 2175 Posts user info edit post |
I've got a large system of quadratic equations that I need to solve (~60 variables). I'm not sure how to do it. All the equations are in a .txt file where each line is an equation that equals zero. Ie.
a*b+3*c+d x*y+y*y+1 . . .
If I could do it in matlab without having to input the equations, that would be great, but i'm willing make a matrix or whatnot if need be. Any help would be great. Thanks! 2/18/2007 10:52:00 PM |
CharlesHF All American 5543 Posts user info edit post |
Somebody teach this boy some linear algebra! 2/19/2007 11:24:29 PM |
clalias All American 1580 Posts user info edit post |
^ Quote : | "a large system of quadratic equations " |
you can do this in matlab without much effort. Just pretty much copy and paste, though you'll have to add some semicolons. You only have 60 eq'ns so it can't take that long.
In matlab you'll use "fsolve". Just check out the help file for that function.
[Edited on February 19, 2007 at 11:44 PM. Reason : .]2/19/2007 11:40:19 PM |
Perlith All American 7620 Posts user info edit post |
If you get bored and try it with Solver in Excel, let me know if it actually works ... Solver crashes way too often
[Edited on February 19, 2007 at 11:49 PM. Reason : .] 2/19/2007 11:49:18 PM |
clalias All American 1580 Posts user info edit post |
matlab is way more robust, I wouldn't even waste your time attempting it in excel. 2/20/2007 12:00:29 AM |
virga All American 2019 Posts user info edit post |
matlab can do the most amazing things
i'm out at the computational science and engineering conference this week, and the guys here 0wn matlab on a daily basis. it's incredible. 2/20/2007 4:28:50 PM |
1985 All American 2175 Posts user info edit post |
thanks.
also clalias, thank's for pointing out they were quadratic. 2/20/2007 7:35:29 PM |
NCSUStinger Duh, Winning 62452 Posts user info edit post |
There's a system to the system. 2/20/2007 7:44:26 PM |