decinfo
Describe how entries of matrix variable X relate to decision variables
Syntax
decX = decinfo(lmisys,X)
decinfo(lmisys)
Description
decinfo
expresses the entries of a matrix variable
X in terms of the decision variables
x1, . . .,
xN. Recall that the decision variables
are the free scalar variables of the problem, or equivalently, the free entries of all
matrix variables described in lmisys
. Each entry of
X is either a hard zero, some decision variable
xn, or its opposite
–xn.
If X
is the identifier of X supplied by
lmivar
, the command
decX = decinfo(lmisys,X)
returns an integer matrix
decX
of the same dimensions as X whose
(i, j) entry is
0 if X(i, j) is a hard zero
n if X(i, j) = xn (the n-th decision variable)
–n if X(i, j) = –xn
decX
clarifies the structure of X as well as its
entry-wise dependence on x1, . . .,
xN. This is useful to specify matrix
variables with atypical structures (see lmivar
).
decinfo
can also be used in interactive mode by invoking it with
a single argument, as decinfo(lmisys)
. It then prompts the user for
a matrix variable and displays in return the decision variable content of this
variable.
Examples
Example 1
Consider an LMI with two matrix variables X and Y with structure:
X = x I3 with x scalar
Y rectangular of size 2-by-1
If these variables are defined by
setlmis([]) X = lmivar(1,[3 0]) Y = lmivar(2,[2 1]) : : lmis = getlmis
the decision variables in X and Y are given by
dX = decinfo(lmis,X) dX = 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 dY = decinfo(lmis,Y) dY = 2 3
This indicates a total of three decision variables x1, x2, x3 that are related to the entries of X and Y by
Note that the number of decision variables corresponds to the number of free entries in X and Y when taking structure into account.
Example 2
Suppose that the matrix variable X is symmetric block diagonal with one 2-by-2 full block and one 2-by-2 scalar block, and is declared by
setlmis([]) X = lmivar(1,[2 1;2 0]) : lmis = getlmis
The decision variable distribution in X can be visualized interactively as follows:
decinfo(lmis) There are 4 decision variables labeled x1 to x4 in this problem. Matrix variable Xk of interest (enter k between 1 and 1, or 0 to quit): ?> 1 The decision variables involved in X1 are among {-x1,...,x4}. Their entry-wise distribution in X1 is as follows (0,j>0,-j<0 stand for 0,xj,-xj, respectively): X1 : 1 2 0 0 2 3 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 4 ********* Matrix variable Xk of interest (enter k between 1 and 1, or 0 to quit): ?> 0
Version History
Introduced before R2006a