Resultados de
The all-community-solutions view shows the ID of each solution, and you can click on the link to go to the solution.
The preferred-community-solutions view does not show the solution IDs and does not link to the solutions. As far as I can tell, there is no way to get from that view to the solutions. If, for example, you want to go to the solution to leave a comment there, you can't.
All-community-solutions view:

Preferred-community-solutions view, with no solution IDs and no links:

Hi cody fellows,
I already solved more than 500 problems -months ago, last july if I remember well- and get this scholar badge, but then it suddenly disappeared a few weeks later. I then solved a few more problems and it reappeared.
Now I observed it disappeared once more a few days ago.
Have you also noticed this erratic behavior of the scholar badge ? Is it normal and / or intentional ? If not, how to explain it ? (deleted problems ?)
Cheers,
Nicolas
I'm seeing solution maps shown with low-contrast gray colors instead of the correct symbol colors. I have observed this using both Safari and Chrome. Screenshot:

Here is a screenshot of a Cody problem that I just created. The math rendering is poor. (I have since edited the problem to remove the math formatting.)

Are there any code restrictions for programming Cody solutions? I could not find anything mentioned at https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/content/cody/about.html, other than toolbox functions not being available.
Automating Parameter Identifiability Analysis in SimBiology
Is it possible to develop a MATLAB Live Script that automates a series of SimBiology model fits to obtain likelihood profiles? The goal is to fit a kinetic model to experimental data while systematically fixing the value of one kinetic constant (e.g., k1) and leaving the others unrestricted.
The script would perform the following:
Use a pre-configured SimBiology project where the best fit to the experimental data has already been established (including dependent/independent variables, covariates, the error model, and optimization settings).
Iterate over a defined sequence of fixed values for a chosen parameter.
For each fixed value, run the estimation to optimize the remaining parameters.
Record the resulting Sum of Squared Errors (SSE) for each run.
The final output would be a likelihood profile—a plot of SSE versus the fixed parameter value (e.g., k1)—to assess the practical identifiability of each model parameter.
For some time now, this has been bugging me - so I thought to gather some more feedback/information/opinions on this.
What would you classify Recursion? As a loop or as a vectorized section of code?
For context, this query occured to me while creating Cody problems involving strict (so to speak) vectorization - (Everyone is more than welcome to check my recent Cody questions).
To make problems interesting and/or difficult, I (and other posters) ban functions and functionalities - such as for loops, while loops, if-else statements, arrayfun() and the rest of the fun() family functions. However, some of the solutions including the reference solution I came up with for my latest problem, contained recursion.
I am rather divided on how to categorize it. What do you think?
For the www, uk, and in domains,a generative search answer is available for Help Center searches. Please let us know if you get good or bad results for your searches. Some have pointed out that it is not available in non-english domains. You can switch your country setting to try it out. You can also ask questions in different languages and ask for the response in a different language. I get better results when I ask more specific queries. How is it working for you?
Hello MATLAB Central community,
My name is Yann. And I love MATLAB. I also love Python ... 🐍 (I know, not the place for that).
I recently decided to go down the rabbit hole of AI. So I started benchmarking deep learning frameworks on basic examples. Here is a recording of my experiment:
Happy to engage in the debate. What do you think?
Large Language Models (LLMs) with MATLAB was updated again today to support the newly released OpenAI models GPT-5, GPT-5 mini, GPT-5 nano, GPT-5 chat, o3, and o4-mini. When you create an openAIChat object, set the ModelName name-value argument to "gpt-5", "gpt-5-mini", "gpt-5-nano", "gpt-5-chat-latest", "o4-mini", or "o3".
This is version 4.4.0 of this free MATLAB add-on that lets you interact with LLMs on MATLAB. The release notes are at Release v4.4.0: Support for GPT-5, o3, o4-mini · matlab-deep-learning/llms-with-matlab
Hey cody fellows :-) !
I recently created two problem groups, but as you can see I struggle to set their cover images :
What is weird given :
- I already did it successfully twice in the past for my previous groups ;
- If you take one problem specifically, Problem 60984. Mesh the icosahedron for instance, you can normally see the icon of the cover image in the top right hand corner, can't you ?
- I always manage to set cover images to my contributions (mostly in the filexchange).
I already tried several image formats, included .png 4/3 ratio, but still the cover images don't set.
Could you please help me to correctly set my cover images ?
Thank you.
Nicolas
Hi everyone,
Please check out our new book "Generative AI for Trading and Asset Management".
GenAI is usually associated with large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT, or with image generation tools like MidJourney, essentially, machines that can learn from text or images and generate text or images. But in reality, these models can learn from many different types of data. In particular, they can learn from time series of asset returns, which is perhaps the most relevant for asset managers.
In our book (amazon.com link), we explore both the practical applications and the fundamental principles of GenAI, with a special focus on how these technologies apply to trading and asset management.
The book is divided into two broad parts:
Part 1 is written by Ernie Chan, noted author of Quantitative Trading, Algorithmic Trading, and Machine Trading. It starts with no-code applications of GenAI for traders and asset managers with little or no coding experience. After that, it takes readers on a whirlwind tour of machine learning techniques commonly used in finance.
Part 2, written by Hamlet, covers the fundamentals and technical details of GenAI, from modeling to efficient inference. This part is for those who want to understand the inner workings of these models and how to adapt them to their own custom data and applications. It’s for anyone who wants to go beyond the high-level use cases, get their hands dirty, and apply, and eventually improve these models in real-world practical applications.
Readers can start with whichever part they want to explore and learn from.
I am deeply honored to announce the official publication of my latest academic volume:
MATLAB for Civil Engineers: From Basics to Advanced Applications
(Springer Nature, 2025).
This work serves as a comprehensive bridge between theoretical civil engineering principles and their practical implementation through MATLAB—a platform essential to the future of computational design, simulation, and optimization in our field.
Structured to serve both academic audiences and practicing engineers, this book progresses from foundational MATLAB programming concepts to highly specialized applications in structural analysis, geotechnical engineering, hydraulic modeling, and finite element methods. Whether you are a student building analytical fluency or a professional seeking computational precision, this volume offers an indispensable resource for mastering MATLAB's full potential in civil engineering contexts.
With rigorously structured examples, case studies, and research-aligned methods, MATLAB for Civil Engineers reflects the convergence of engineering logic with algorithmic innovation—equipping readers to address contemporary challenges with clarity, accuracy, and foresight.
📖 Ideal for:
— Graduate and postgraduate civil engineering students
— University instructors and lecturers seeking a structured teaching companion
— Professionals aiming to integrate MATLAB into complex real-world projects
If you are passionate about engineering resilience, data-informed design, or computational modeling, I invite you to explore the work and share it with your network.
🧠 Let us advance the discipline together through precision, programming, and purpose.

The Graphics and App Building Blog just launched its first article on R2025a features, authored by Chris Portal, the director of engineering for the MATLAB graphics and app building teams.
Over the next few months, we'll publish a series of articles that showcase our updated graphics system, introduce new tools and features, and provide valuable references enriched by the perspectives of those involved in their development.
To stay updated, you can subscribe to the blog (look for the option in the upper left corner of the blog page). We also encourage you to join the conversation—your comments and questions under each article help shape the discussion and guide future content.
I want to observe the time (Tmax) to reach maximum drug concentration (Cmax) in my model. I have set up the OBSERVABLES as follows (figure1): Cmax = max(Blood.lL15); Tmax_LT = time(Conc_lL15_LT_nm == max(Conc_lL15_LT_nm)); Tmax_Tm = time(Conc_lL15_Tumor_nm == max(Conc_lL15_Tumor_nm)); After running the Sobol indices program for global sensitivity analysis, with inputs being some parameters and their ranges, the output for Cmax works, but there are some prompts, as shown in figure2. Additionally, when outputting Tmax, the program does not run successfully and reports some errors, as shown in figure2. How can I resolve the errors when outputting Tmax?


I like this problem by James and have solved it in several ways. A solution by Natalie impressed me and introduced me to a new function conv2. However, it occured to me that the numerous test for the problem only cover cases of square matrices. My original solutions, and Natalie's, did niot work on rectangular matrices. I have now produced a solution which works on rectangular matrices. Thanks for this thought provoking problem James.
Large Languge model with MATLAB, a free add-on that lets you access LLMs from OpenAI, Azure, amd Ollama (to use local models) on MATLAB, has been updated to support OpenAI GPT-4.1, GPT-4.1 mini, and GPT-4.1 nano.
According to OpenAI, "These models outperform GPT‑4o and GPT‑4o mini across the board, with major gains in coding and instruction following. They also have larger context windows—supporting up to 1 million tokens of context—and are able to better use that context with improved long-context comprehension."
What would you build with the latest update?

Provide insightful answers
9%
Provide label-AI answer
9%
Provide answer by both AI and human
21%
Do not use AI for answers
46%
Give a button "chat with copilot"
10%
use AI to draft better qustions
5%
1561 votos
I have written, tested, and prepared a function with four subsunctions on my computer for solving one of the problems in the list of Cody problems in MathWorks in three days. Today, when I wanted to upload or copy paste the codes of the function and its subfunctions to the specified place of the problem of Cody page, I do not see a place to upload it, and the ability to copy past the codes. The total of the entire codes and their documentations is about 600 lines, which means that I cannot and it is not worth it to retype all of them in the relevent Cody environment after spending a few days. I would appreciate your guidance on how to enter the prepared codes to the desired environment in Cody.
%% 清理环境
close all; clear; clc;
%% 模拟时间序列
t = linspace(0,12,200); % 时间从 0 到 12,分 200 个点
% 下面构造一些模拟的"峰状"数据,用于演示
% 你可以根据需要替换成自己的真实数据
rng(0); % 固定随机种子,方便复现
baseIntensity = -20; % 强度基线(z 轴的最低值)
numSamples = 5; % 样本数量
yOffsets = linspace(20,140,numSamples); % 不同样本在 y 轴上的偏移
colors = [ ...
0.8 0.2 0.2; % 红
0.2 0.8 0.2; % 绿
0.2 0.2 0.8; % 蓝
0.9 0.7 0.2; % 金黄
0.6 0.4 0.7]; % 紫
% 构造一些带多个峰的模拟数据
dataMatrix = zeros(numSamples, length(t));
for i = 1:numSamples
% 随机峰参数
peakPositions = randperm(length(t),3); % 三个峰位置
intensities = zeros(size(t));
for pk = 1:3
center = peakPositions(pk);
width = 10 + 10*rand; % 峰宽
height = 100 + 50*rand; % 峰高
% 高斯峰
intensities = intensities + height*exp(-((1:length(t))-center).^2/(2*width^2));
end
% 再加一些小随机扰动
intensities = intensities + 10*randn(size(t));
dataMatrix(i,:) = intensities;
end
%% 开始绘图
figure('Color','w','Position',[100 100 800 600],'Theme','light');
hold on; box on; grid on;
for i = 1:numSamples
% 构造 fill3 的多边形顶点
xPatch = [t, fliplr(t)];
yPatch = [yOffsets(i)*ones(size(t)), fliplr(yOffsets(i)*ones(size(t)))];
zPatch = [dataMatrix(i,:), baseIntensity*ones(size(t))];
% 使用 fill3 填充面积
hFill = fill3(xPatch, yPatch, zPatch, colors(i,:));
set(hFill,'FaceAlpha',0.8,'EdgeColor','none'); % 调整透明度、去除边框
% 在每条曲线尾部标注 Sample i
text(t(end)+0.3, yOffsets(i), dataMatrix(i,end), ...
['Sample ' num2str(i)], 'FontSize',10, ...
'HorizontalAlignment','left','VerticalAlignment','middle');
end
%% 坐标轴与视角设置
xlim([0 12]);
ylim([0 160]);
zlim([-20 350]);
xlabel('Time (sec)','FontWeight','bold');
ylabel('Frequency (Hz)','FontWeight','bold');
zlabel('Intensity','FontWeight','bold');
% 设置刻度(根据需要微调)
set(gca,'XTick',0:2:12, ...
'YTick',0:40:160, ...
'ZTick',-20:40:200);
% 设置视角(az = 水平旋转,el = 垂直旋转)
view([211 21]);
% 让三维坐标轴在后方
set(gca,'Projection','perspective');
% 如果想去掉默认的坐标轴线,也可以尝试
% set(gca,'BoxStyle','full','LineWidth',1.2);
%% 可选:在后方添加一个浅色网格平面 (示例)
% 这个与题图右上方的网格类似
[Xplane,Yplane] = meshgrid([0 12],[0 160]);
Zplane = baseIntensity*ones(size(Xplane)); % 在 Z = -20 处画一个竖直面的框
surf(Xplane, Yplane, Zplane, ...
'FaceColor',[0.95 0.95 0.9], ...
'EdgeColor','k','FaceAlpha',0.3);
%% 进一步美化(可根据需求调整)
title('3D Stacked Plot Example','FontSize',12);
constantplane("x",12,FaceColor=rand(1,3),FaceAlpha=0.5);
constantplane("y",0,FaceColor=rand(1,3),FaceAlpha=0.5);
constantplane("z",-19,FaceColor=rand(1,3),FaceAlpha=0.5);
hold off;
Have fun! Enjoy yourself!
