Simpson's rule for numerical integration
Z = SIMPS(Y) computes an approximation of the integral of Y via the Simpson's method (with unit spacing). To compute the integral for spacing different from one, multiply Z by the spacing increment.
Z = SIMPS(X,Y) computes the integral of Y with respect to X using the Simpson's rule.
Z = SIMPS(X,Y,DIM) or SIMPS(Y,DIM) integrates across dimension DIM
SIMPS uses the same syntax as TRAPZ.
Example:
-------
% The integral of sin(x) on [0,pi] is 2
% Let us compare TRAPZ and SIMPS
x = linspace(0,pi,6);
y = sin(x);
trapz(x,y) % returns 1.9338
simps(x,y) % returns 2.0071
Cite As
Damien Garcia (2024). Simpson's rule for numerical integration (https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/25754-simpson-s-rule-for-numerical-integration), MATLAB Central File Exchange. Retrieved .
MATLAB Release Compatibility
Platform Compatibility
Windows macOS LinuxCategories
Tags
Acknowledgements
Inspired: simpsonQuadrature, VGRID: utility to help vectorize code, Generation of Random Variates
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!Discover Live Editor
Create scripts with code, output, and formatted text in a single executable document.