MatlabIntro

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Basics

  • Use semi-colon at the end of the line to prevent the output of the operation to be printed to the screen
>> x = 1

x =

     1

vs.

>> x = 1;
>>


  • Comments are specified using % at the beginning of the comment. Only line comments are allowed (sorry, but no block-comments, although there's a shortcut in the editor to comment out all the selected lines)
>> % This is a comment
>> x = 0; % this is another comment


  • Functions may return more than one value, and they can be of any type. For example:
>> [r,c] = size([ones(2)])

r =

     2


c =

     2


Vector and Matrices

  • Use square brackets to define a vector/matrix
>> x = [1 2 3 4 5]


  • Inside a vector/matrix definition, commas or spaces separate elements row-wise. For example:
>> x = [1 2 3 4 5]

is the same as:

>> x = [1,2,3,4,5]

and they both generate a row vector. Semi-colons, instead, separate elements column-wise. For example, the following line will create a column vector:

>> x = [1;2;3;4;5]


  • You can combine both to create a bigger matrix:
>> x = [1 2 3 4;2 3 4 5;3 4 5 6]

x =

     1     2     3     4
     2     3     4     5
     3     4     5     6

  • Some useful vector/matrix operators are:

In the following code snippets I'll assume that x was defined as:

>> x = [1 2;3 4]

x =

     1     2
     3     4
    • Use ' as a suffix to transpose the vector/matrix:
>> x'

ans =

     1     3
     2     4
>> 
    • The function size(x) will return the size of x: first number is the number of row and the second is the number of columns:
>> size(x)

ans =

     2     2
    • You can access individual elements of a matrix using parenthesis (first argument specifies the row and the second specifies the column):
>> x(2,1)

ans =

     3

Plotting

The basic command is plot(x), to plot the contents of x (if x is a matrix, then each column is plotted as a different line):

>> fs = 441000;
>> t = 0:1/fs:0.01;
>> plot(sin(2*pi*220*t));

You can also use plot(x,y):

>> plot(t, sin(2*pi*220*t));

By default plot will erase the previous plot before drawing the new one. Use hold to prevent this from happening. Also, you can use a third argument to specify the line color (and other plotting options):

>> hold on;
>> plot(t, sin(2*pi*110*t), 'r');
>> plot(t, sin(2*pi*330*t), 'g');
>> plot(t, sin(2*pi*440*t), 'k');


Sound

General tips

  1. Try to vectorize every operation if you can