problems writing a function

Hi all, I'm trying to write a function, but I have some problems, this is the script:
exp((abs((x+2)*(x-3))/((x+3)*(x-2))))
But Matlab shows me an error:
Error using *
Inner matrix dimensions must agree.
So I changed all with .*( what is the difference? ) The plot shows me a straight line at 2,42 (as if I only copy the function on matlab command window), but If I copy the function on wolfram site, the result is as I expect. Why? Thanks in advance, Alessandro

1 Comment

Stephen23
Stephen23 on 25 Feb 2015
Edited: Stephen23 on 25 Feb 2015
The difference is simple:
  • without the period follow the rules of linear algebra, as used in mathematics using matrices, for example * performs matrix multiplication.
  • with the period performs element-wise operations on the corresponding elements of the arrays, for example .* gives the Hadamard product.
This is clearly explained in the documentation:

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 Accepted Answer

exp((abs((x+2).*(x-3))./((x+3).*(x-2))))

5 Comments

oh, ./ thank you! problem solved. Can you explain me the difference between * and .*?
[1 2].*[3 4]
The result is a multiplication element by element
[1*3 2*4]
The multiplication
[1 2]*[3 4]
is not allowed, because the number of columns in the first matrix should be the same as the number of rows in the second
so,when I work with parenthesis I must write .*? thank you!
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 26 Feb 2015
Edited: Stephen23 on 27 Feb 2015
"when I work with parenthesis I must write .*"
No, because the difference between * and .* has nothing to do with the parentheses at all. Read the documentation to know why: both of these operations can be performed on matrices, so the fact that you create matrices with parentheses is completely irrelevant to which operation you use. The difference is in what they calculate.
linofex
linofex on 27 Feb 2015
Edited: linofex on 27 Feb 2015
thank you for the documentation,solved the difference between * , or .* but why in my function, without matrices, there was the error?

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on 25 Feb 2015

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on 27 Feb 2015

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