Vandermonde Matrix and an Error Vector

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Joseph Percsy
Joseph Percsy el 25 de Abr. de 2013
format long
n = inputdlg('Please enter a series of numbers seperated by spaces/commas: ')
numbers = str2num(n{1});
X = 0
V = fliplr(vander(numbers))
r_size = size(V,2);
c_size = size(V,1);
B = 1+(r_size./numbers)
X = B/V
Here's what I have so far. I've been running the program with n = 5, 15, 20, and basically I want to implement an a way of calculating an error vector using Error = (X - Dt), where Dt = [1, 1, 0, 0, 0, . . . , 0]T.
I'm not really quite sure how to go about this, and is this a good way to solve VX = B for X? Cheers for any advice guys.

Respuestas (2)

bym
bym el 25 de Abr. de 2013
  2 comentarios
Joseph Percsy
Joseph Percsy el 25 de Abr. de 2013
No, the system is X = B/V. That's not going to change.
Matt J
Matt J el 25 de Abr. de 2013
That's not what you posted. You posted that you wanted to solve V*X=B. The solution for that will be
X=V\B

Iniciar sesión para comentar.


Matt J
Matt J el 25 de Abr. de 2013
Editada: Matt J el 25 de Abr. de 2013
Why not just use POLYFIT?
X=polyfit(numbers,B,length(B)-1);
It is more numerically stable than using the Vandermonde matrix directly.
I want to implement an a way of calculating an error vector using Error = (X - Dt), where Dt = [1, 1, 0, 0, 0, . . . , 0]T.
I don't really understand where Dt comes from, but why not implement it directly as you've written it?
Dt=[1 1, zeros(1,length(X)-2)].';
Error=X-Dt;

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