How do I plot this?? "if, elseif, else"
1 view (last 30 days)
Show older comments
t=0;
for i=0:50
t=t+1
if (0 <= t && t < 10)
v=(11*(t.^2))-(5*t)
elseif(10 <= t && t <20)
v=1100-(5*t)
elseif(20 <= t && t <30)
v=(50*t) + 2*((t-20)^2)
elseif (t >= 30)
v=1520* exp(-0.2*(t-30))
else
v=0
end
end
%% After I hit run I get a bunch of numbers. I want to plot these values (v vs t).
1 Comment
Adam
on 9 Feb 2018
You need to store them in an array. This is the most basic part of Matlab and is covered under the 'Getting Started' section when you open the help.
Once you have your arrays then
doc plot
will show you that you can plot them with
plot( t, v )
or, better
plot( hAxes, v, t )
where hAxes is an axes handle you have created from e.g.
figure; hAxes = gca;
Accepted Answer
Pawel Jastrzebski
on 9 Feb 2018
Edited: Pawel Jastrzebski
on 9 Feb 2018
Firstly,
I think that your first loop overwrites the t value instead of creating a vector of t values.
For what you're trying to achieve, consider the following code:
t = 0:50;
% to plot 't' vs 'v' you need the equal amount of
% datapoints in both vectors
v = zeros(1,length(t));
% Use logical vector to meet your condtions
condition1 = (0<=t & t <10);
v(condition1) = 11*(t(condition1).^2) - 5*t(condition1);
condition2 = (10<=t & t<20);
v(condition2) = 1100-5*t(condition2);
% etc.
% plotting
figure
plot(t,v,'ro--');
2 Comments
Guillaume
on 9 Feb 2018
Yes, while it is possible to create v in a loop, it is much simpler to do it the way Pawel is showing, using logical masks.
More Answers (0)
See Also
Categories
Find more on Graphics Performance 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!