How to show exact answers in MATLAB
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Hello everyone, I run into this exact answer problem with MATLAB pretty frequently. My problem is right now when I'm trying to do an inverse of a matrix containing square roots, it gives me answers in fractions or in decimals. I want it to show the square roots and other functions. How would I go about doing this? I've googled a while and all they say are precision values and rounding and what not, but nothing to do with these square roots.
2 Comments
Karan Gill
on 14 Nov 2017
Use symbolic arithmetic. See: https://www.mathworks.com/help/symbolic/choose-symbolic-or-numeric-arithmetic.html
As Walter answered, use
>> inv([sqrt(sym(21))])
ans =
21^(1/2)/21
Answers (3)
Mahdi
on 24 Sep 2013
Why don't you try an approach where you use square the matrix to find out what the numbers are?
For example
MatrixSquared=Matrix.^2;
Then you would be able to see which numbers were square rooted. I would also suggest placing
format rat
before the code.
1 Comment
Suh-Shin
on 24 Sep 2013
Sounds like you're trying to do a symbolic matrix inverse operation. The Symbolic Math Toolbox will let you do that, see
6 Comments
Suh-Shin
on 24 Sep 2013
Walter Roberson
on 25 Sep 2013
inv([sqrt(sym(21))])
Seetha Rama Raju Sanapala
on 9 Feb 2018
I want to get answers in fractional form for operations on fractions like 1/2 + 15/17, 2/5*3/16 etc. Which route is better - sym or format rat? Why?
Walter Roberson
on 9 Feb 2018
sym as early as possible, before you even do the division. For example sym(15)/sym(17). Otherwise you are losing precision in the fractions. format rat does not return the true fraction corresponding to the internal representation of the floating point numbers: format rat uses a continued fraction approach to try to find the closest fraction within a tolerance. So where true fraction might be 38183/86917, format rat might decide that 38/87 is "close enough" to display
Seetha Rama Raju Sanapala
on 9 Feb 2018
Great clarity, @ Walter Roberson! Thanks.
Karan Gill
on 13 Feb 2018
Shashank Prasanna
on 24 Sep 2013
Use format to reset your display format or choose a different display format:
>> format
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