I am having trouble getting a code to read in elements of an array. Please help?
1 visualización (últimos 30 días)
Mostrar comentarios más antiguos
Ok so I need to design a function that reads in grades ( 82, 90, 75, 94, 88, 99, 45, 90 ) , and outputs them as an array, and displays what each grade is as a letter grade. This is what I have so far. Please help
if true
grades = [82, 90, 75, 94, 88, 99, 45, 90]
for a=1; grades(:)
if grades<60
fprintf ('grade = F')
elseif grades>=60 , grades<70
fprintf ('grade = D')
elseif grades>=70 , grades<80
fprintf ('grade = C')
elseif grades>=80 , grades<90
fprintf ('grade = B')
elseif grades>=90
fprintf ('grade = A')
fprintf(grades)
end
end
end
0 comentarios
Respuestas (3)
Adam
el 11 de Abr. de 2016
Editada: Adam
el 11 de Abr. de 2016
A bunch of thoughts on what you have so far...
If this is a function aren't the grades supposed to be inputs to the function? I'm not sure how this would be though if you are supposed to put them into an array within the function since an array would be the only sensible way to pass such grades into the function.
for a = 1;
does nothing. If you are trying to loop round the array of grades you need something more like:
for a = 1:numel( grades )
if grades(a) < 60
...
elseif
...
...
end
There are better ways than a big series of if and elseif clauses for something like this, but it depends what stage of learning you are at. If you are at the very beginning then the more advanced syntaxes may be something for learning later rather than for this task.
elseif grades>=60 , grades<70
is not valid syntax though - you have to create a logical condition to test e.g.
elseif grades(a) >= 60 && grades(a) < 70
Overall though it isn't clear from your question exactly what you inputs and outputs to/from the function are supposed to be. Are you wanting to output results in an array or just print them to the command line or to file?
doc fprintf
is used for writing to file, but expects a file id as first argument. I assume you do not intend to write to file.
doc disp
would suffice for what you appear to be outputting.
6 comentarios
Adam
el 12 de Abr. de 2016
Actually looking at it again
fprintf( '%d = B\n', grades(a) )
works fine. I am used to using that for printing to file, but it can also be used to print to command window rather than disp( sprintf(...) ).
There are a few other things wrong with your answer, but they should all be obvious. Your editor should underline syntax errors for you and you should double-check all your statements for things like missing array indexing, missing 'if' and just copy-pasting the same statement into every clause of he if statement.
Star Strider
el 11 de Abr. de 2016
You need a logical operator here. A comma is not one:
elseif grades>=60 && grades<70
... and so for the rest.
0 comentarios
Azzi Abdelmalek
el 11 de Abr. de 2016
Editada: Azzi Abdelmalek
el 11 de Abr. de 2016
grades = [82, 90, 75, 94, 88, 99, 45, 90];
for a=grades
if a<60
display ('grade = F')
elseif a>=60 & a<70
display('grade = D')
0 comentarios
Ver también
Categorías
Más información sobre Get Started with MATLAB en Help Center y File Exchange.
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!