Problem 23. Finding Perfect Squares
Given a vector of numbers, return true if one of the numbers is a square of one of the numbers. Otherwise return false.
Example:
Input a = [2 3 4]
Output b is true
Output is true since 2^2 is 4 and both 2 and 4 appear on the list.
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Christian Schröder
on 20 Oct 2023
@Tran Up to floating point arithmetic, sqrt(a(i))^2 is the same as a(i), so you're really just testing whether the vector a is non-empty.
(Note that the failing cases are the one where the correct answer is "false", while the ones where you succeed are the ones where it is "true").
Oren
on 8 Jan 2024
Nice little problem :)
Umar
on 22 May 2024
It was very interesting
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Introduction to MATLAB
- 23 Problems
- 8733 Finishers
- Add two numbers
- Find the sum of all the numbers of the input vector
- Maximum value in a matrix
- Return area of square
- Finding Perfect Squares
- Make the vector [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10]
- Generate a vector like 1,2,2,3,3,3,4,4,4,4
- Triangle Numbers
- Length of the hypotenuse
- Select every other element of a vector
- Reverse the vector
- Column Removal
- Swap the input arguments
- Swap the first and last columns
- Check if number exists in vector
- Determine whether a vector is monotonically increasing
- Getting the indices from a vector
- Create times-tables
- Return the first and last characters of a character array
- Number of 1s in a binary string
- Make a random, non-repeating vector.
- Magic is simple (for beginners)
- Sum all integers from 1 to 2^n
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