Equally increasing decimal numbers in an array

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Hello! This might be super simple but I keep seem to find an elegant way of doing this.
I simply want an array to list numbers consecutively between 0.1 and 1.0 going up in intervals of 0.1. I can't write it as 0.1:1 because it won't go up in increments of 0.1.
Does anyone know a simple way of doing this?
Thank you!

Accepted Answer

Star Strider
Star Strider on 15 Nov 2015
Yes. You can supply a ‘step’ to the colon operator to produce whatever step values you want in your vector:
v = 0.1:0.1:1;
  2 Comments
Olivia Milton-thompson
Olivia Milton-thompson on 15 Nov 2015
Brilliant, thank you! I thought it was something like that but I couldn't get it to work! I assume the middle 0.1 is the increment?
Star Strider
Star Strider on 15 Nov 2015
Thank you! My pleasure!
Correct. The middle 0.1 here is the step. (If you don’t specificallly state the step, the default step is 1.)

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More Answers (1)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 15 Nov 2015
You have to give a starting value, a step, and an ending value - you gave only two of those, which it takes as starting value and ending value, so use all three startingValue:stepValue:endingValue, or 0.1 : 0.1 : 1 (like Star said). Alternatively, you should know about this useful little utility called linspace(). It's similar except that you specify how many steps you want and it computes the step size for you. let's say you wanted 10 steps between 0.1 and 1.0. Then you could do
v = linspace(0.1, 1.0, 10); % linspace(start, stop, numSteps)
Both methods have their uses and you'll probably use both in the future.
  1 Comment
Star Strider
Star Strider on 15 Nov 2015
The key difference is that the colon operator uses a fixed step, so the vector length will vary. The linspace function specifies a fixed length, and adjusts vector step size to fit the length.

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