Using FPLOT to plot a multi variable function

Lets say I have function f= (x^3+y^3+z^3). For a constant y and z, I want to plot function 'f' between xmin<x<xmax using fplot. Is this possible?

 Respuesta aceptada

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 6 de Feb. de 2014
f = @(x,y,z) x^3+y^3+z^3;
ycon = 5;
zcon = .34;
fun = @(x) f(x,ycon,zcon);
xmin = -4;
xmax = 6;
fplot(fun, [xmin, xmax])

5 comentarios

Shima Khatiri
Shima Khatiri el 24 de Ag. de 2017
What if y and z are not constant? how can we plot the general form?
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 24 de Ag. de 2017
If x, y, and z are not constant, then you have three input variables and one output variable, and you would need a four-dimensional plot. There are no facilities in MATLAB to do four-dimensional plots.
Your code gives me a plot, but also a warning:
"Warning: Function behaves unexpectedly on array inputs. To improve performance, properly vectorize your function to return an output with the same size and shape as the input arguments."
Is there an appropriate way to vectorize this?
f = @(x,y,z) x.^3+y.^3+z.^3;
Thanks, that works. I have a related question about plotting a function given as an integral depending on a parameter, but that seems to deserve it's own post so I'll start a new discussion.

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Más respuestas (2)

Naveen
Naveen el 6 de Feb. de 2014

0 votos

Never mind. I found it
fplot(@(x) f(x,yvalue,zvalue), [xmin xmax])
Pratiksha Shinde
Pratiksha Shinde el 7 de Ag. de 2020

0 votos

How to find FFT of boost converter Boost converter

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