- the name of the function fun is different from myfun
- fun and its gradient are both evaluated at x.
How to use the Finite Difference Method to get the gradient?
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Hi there,
I need to calculate the gradient (partial derivative) of a function. I found that Matlab has got a '.p' file/function called 'finitedifferences' to do this.
However, I am not sure how to use it. For example, I found that Matlab do it like,
[gradFd,~,~,numEvals] = finitedifferences(x,funfcn{3},[],[],[],f,[],[], ...
1:numberOfVariables,finDiffOpts,sizes,gradFd,[],[],finDiffFlags,[],varargin{:});
but what is funfcn{3} here?
Suppose I have a simple function like,
function F = myfun(x)
F = sin(x) + 3;
in which, x is a vector contains 6 elements. Then how to use the finitedifferences to get the gradient w.r.t each of this 6 elements? Thanks very much!
wbr, Aaron
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Accepted Answer
Andrew Newell
on 20 May 2011
Here is an example of a function that uses gradest correctly:
function [F, g] = myfun(x)
fun = @(y) 2*sum(sin(y)) + 3;
F = fun(x);
g = gradest(fun,x);
The key differences are:
Also, I have made it more efficient in a couple of other ways. Now you can test this directly using:
x = rand(4,1);
ganalytic = 2*cos(x)'; % This is the analytic gradient
[F,g] = myfun(x);
max(abs(g-ganalytic))
The last line tells you the maximum difference between the analytic and numerical gradients.
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More Answers (6)
Andrew Newell
on 20 May 2011
That looks like an awkward way of doing it. I recommend downloading Adaptive Robust Numerical Differentiation from the FEX.
EDIT: Note that this package has functions for calculating gradient and Hessian.
0 Comments
Aaronne
on 20 May 2011
3 Comments
Arnaud Miege
on 23 May 2011
I think that's because your function myfun outputs a scalar and gradient needs a vector of values to work out what the gradient is at each point:
>> [F, g] = myfun([1 2 3 4])
F =
5.2702
g =
0
Aaronne
on 20 May 2011
3 Comments
Andrew Newell
on 20 May 2011
Not a problem! You already format your code nicely, which really helps.
Aaronne
on 20 May 2011
2 Comments
Andrew Newell
on 20 May 2011
You get a recursion error because MYFUN is calling itself instead of the function F. Instead of using derivest, you should use gradest from the same package (see the edit to my answer above).
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