what is wrong with my code? vertcat error

9 views (last 30 days)
EEEmatlab
EEEmatlab on 30 Oct 2017
Commented: DGM on 6 Apr 2024
t = [0:0.4:40];
a = [20.*sin(t); 20.*cos(t); 0];
b = [0; 0; (10-((t.^2)/16))];
s = a+b
It gives me: Error using vertcat Dimensions of matrices being concatenated are not consistent. what is wrong?
  1 Comment
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 30 Oct 2017
Edited: Stephen23 on 30 Oct 2017
You are trying to concatenate vectors with different numbers of columns:
>> size(t)
ans =
1 101
>> size(0)
ans =
1 1
t has 101 columns (as do sin and cos outputs too), whereas 0 has one column. It is not possible to vertically concatenate arrays with different numbers of columns.

Sign in to comment.

Answers (3)

M
M on 30 Oct 2017
You are trying to define a matrix that can not exist.
In your case, t is a vector of dimension 101
size(t)
ans =
1 101
and so is
20.*sin(t)
but when you write
a = [20.*sin(t); 20.*cos(t); 0];
0 is a scalar of dimension
What you should do is have a look at the function
zeros(M,N) or zeros([M,N]) is an M-by-N matrix of zeros.

Rik
Rik on 30 Oct 2017
The dimensions of matrices being concatenated are not consistent. t is a row-vector, 0 is not.
Apart from that, a will have 203 elements, while b will have only 103 elements, so a+b will fail.

Puneet
Puneet on 6 Apr 2024
A_trans = (T * [A; 1])';
Error using vertcat
  1 Comment
DGM
DGM on 6 Apr 2024
You're trying to concatenate an array A, and the scalar 1. A has more than one column.

Sign in to comment.

Categories

Find more on Creating and Concatenating Matrices in Help Center and File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!