Binary Number Transmitter
14 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
I need to create a transmitter that generates 100000 binary bits encoded as +/-3 volts using rand() but it doesn't seem to recognize the if just goes to the else. I know its something dumb any help would be appreciated I have:
x = rand(1,100000)
bit=(x>.5)
if bit==0
bit = bit-3
else x == 1
bit = bit+3
end
0 Comments
Accepted Answer
Sven
on 15 Nov 2011
The "if" statement is only executed once, however you have 100000 elements. Essentially, if any elements in a vector are false, the "if" statement will return false. That's why you never enter the "true" portion of the if statement. Here's what I think you were trying:
x = rand(1,100000)
bit = double(x>.5);
bit(bit==0) = -3;
bit(bit==1) = 3;
Or, in a single line statement:
bit = (rand(1,100000)>0.5)*6 - 3;
2 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 15 Nov 2011
The single-line statement will work, but the separate statements will not work in the form stated. bit = x>.5 will set bit to be of type logical, and once it is type logical all assignments to part of the vector will saturate to 0 or 1.
This would fix the problem, though:
bit = 0 + (x>.5);
Then bit would be of type double and assigning -3 or +3 to it would not be a problem.
More Answers (1)
Will
on 15 Nov 2011
2 Comments
Sven
on 15 Nov 2011
I'm not quite sure what you mean here, Will.
Your best bet will be to accept an answer to this question and write a new question about bit error rates. I'm afraid the short sentence above is a little unclear to me. Your original question here was well written: clearly written, well described, and you showed the code you were running. If you can do that again with this next question I'm sure you'll get an answer quickly.
See Also
Categories
Find more on Logical in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!