Help with how to exclude zero and show a more efficient way to display the velocity and time in one line?
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I cant figure out how to exclude zero so that when the min velocity and the time the min velocity occurs to not show zero basically I want to show the first velocity and time thats not zero and to display the velocity and time together in a more efficient way??
clear;
clc;
veldata = dlmread('veldata.txt',' ');
time = veldata(:,1);
velocity = veldata(:,2);
if (time > 0)
time = time;
end
[min_velocity,min_ind] = min(velocity);
[max_velocity,max_ind] = max(velocity);
avg_velocity = mean(velocity);
t_minv = time(min_ind);
t_maxv = time(max_ind);
disp('The min velocity at time = ')
disp(min_velocity)
disp(t_minv)
disp(' The max velocity at time in seconds is = ')
disp(max_velocity)
disp(t_maxv)
disp('The average velocity is: ')
disp(avg_velocity)
0 件のコメント
採用された回答
Star Strider
2014 年 11 月 4 日
Change the first few lines of your code to these:
veldata = dlmread('veldata.txt',' ');
timev = veldata(:,1); % Changed ‘time’ To ‘timev’
velocityv = veldata(:,2); % Changed ‘velocity’ To ‘velocityv’
% ADD THESE LINES
time = timev(timev>0);
velocity = velocityv(velocityv>0);
The rest of your code is unchanged.
I kept the original data for ‘velocity’ as ‘velocityv’ and ‘time’ as ‘timev’ in the event you want them intact for later processing or plotting.
The definition of ‘time’ and ‘velocity’ from them uses ‘logical indexing’. (It would otherwise require the find function to do the same thing.)
2 件のコメント
Star Strider
2014 年 11 月 4 日
Yes!
Use the fprintf function:
fprintf(1,'\nThe min velocity at time = %.2f is %.2f\n', t_minv, min_velocity)
fprintf(1,'\nThe max velocity at time = %.2f is %.2f\n', t_maxv, max_velocity)
fprintf(1,'\nThe average velocity is %.2f\n', avg_velocity)
(The ‘1’ file identifiers denoting standard output — the Command Window — aren’t strictly necessary now, but they once were and I’m in the habit of using them.)
その他の回答 (1 件)
Image Analyst
2014 年 11 月 4 日
You forgot to attach veldata.txt. You can set graphing limits with the xlim() and ylim() functions. Set them up to not include 0 if you don't want 0 on your axes. If that doesn't do it, then attach your data so we can see what you're talking about. http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/6200-tutorial-how-to-ask-a-question-on-answers-and-get-a-fast-answer
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