01066nam a2200277 i 450099100216714970753620020503161828.0000704s1974 it ||| | ita b10325980-39ule_instEXGIL98544ExLBiblioteca Interfacoltàita951Fitzgerald, Charles Patrick134396La civiltà cinese /C. P. FitzgeraldTorino :Einaudi,[1974]XVII, 542 p., [10] c. di tav. :ill. ;22 cm.Saggi [Einaudi] ;523Tit. orig.: ChinaCinaCiviltàStoria.b1032598017-02-1727-06-02991002167149707536LE002 St. IV L 2512002000682871le002-E0.00-l- 01010.i1038359127-06-02LE016 STO 15 248 12016000095883le016Fondo NencinE6.00-no 00000.i1443511127-04-07Civiltà cinese200263UNISALENTOle002le01601-01-00ma -itait 3105306nam 2200649Ia 450 991078070620332120200520144314.01-282-55257-097866125525710-08-095211-9(CKB)2500000000000211(EBL)535021(OCoLC)601961776(SSID)ssj0000331990(PQKBManifestationID)11266606(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000331990(PQKBWorkID)10350366(PQKB)10577003(Au-PeEL)EBL535021(CaPaEBR)ebr10378855(CaONFJC)MIL255257(CaSebORM)9780123748836(MiAaPQ)EBC535021(PPN)142523291(EXLCZ)99250000000000021120081103d2010 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrEssential MATLAB for engineers and scientists[electronic resource] /Brian H. Hahn, Daniel T. Valentine4th ed.Burlington, MA Academic Pressc20101 online resource (411 p.)Includes index.0-12-374883-6 Front Cover; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Preface; Part 1: Essentials; Chapter 1. Introduction; 1.1 Using MATLAB; 1.1.1 Arithmetic; 1.1.2 Variables; 1.1.3 Mathematical functions; 1.1.4 Functions and commands; 1.1.5 Vectors; 1.1.6 Linear equations; 1.1.7 Demo; 1.1.8 Help; 1.1.9 Additional features; 1.2 The MATLAB Desktop; 1.3 Sample Program; 1.3.1 Cut and paste; 1.3.2 Saving a program: script files; 1.3.3 A program in action; Summary; Chapter Exercises; Chapter 2. MATLAB Fundamentals; 2.1 Variables; 2.1.1 Case sensitivity; 2.2 The Workspace2.2.1 Adding commonly used constants to the workspace2.3 Arrays: Vectors and Matrices; 2.3.1 Initializing vectors: Explicit lists; 2.3.2 Initializing vectors: The colon operator; 2.3.3 The linspace function; 2.3.4 Transposing vectors; 2.3.5 Subscripts; 2.3.6 Matrices; 2.3.7 Capturing output; 2.4 Vertical Motion Under Gravity; 2.5 Operators, Expressions, and Statements; 2.5.1 Numbers; 2.5.2 Data types; 2.5.3 Arithmetic operators; 2.5.4 Operator precedence; 2.5.5 The colon operator; 2.5.6 The transpose operator; 2.5.7 Arithmetic operations on arrays; 2.5.8 Expressions; 2.5.9 Statements2.5.10 Statements, commands, and functions2.5.11 Formula vectorization; 2.6 Output; 2.6.1 The disp statement; 2.6.2 The format command; 2.6.3 Scale factors; 2.7 Repeating with for; 2.7.1 Square roots with Newton's method; 2.7.2 Factorials!; 2.7.3 Limit of a sequence; 2.7.4 The basic for construct; 2.7.5 for in a single line; 2.7.6 More general for; 2.7.7 Avoid for loops by vectorizing!; 2.8 Decisions; 2.8.1 The one-line if statement; 2.8.2 The if-else construct; 2.8.3 The one-line if-else statement; 2.8.4 elseif; 2.8.5 Logical operators; 2.8.6 Multiple ifs versus elseif; 2.8.7 Nested ifs2.8.8 Vectorizing ifs?2.8.9 The switch statement; 2.9 Complex Numbers; 2.10 More on Input and Output; 2.10.1 fprintf; 2.10.2 Output to a disk file with fprintf; 2.10.3 General file I/O; 2.10.4 Saving and loading data; 2.11 Odds and Ends; 2.11.1 Variables, functions, and scripts with the same name; 2.11.2 The input statement; 2.11.3 Shelling out to the operating system; 2.11.4 More Help functions; 2.12 Programming Style; Summary; Chapter Exercises; Chapter 3. Program Design and Algorithm Development; 3.1 The Program Design Process; 3.1.1 The projectile problem; 3.2 Structure Plan Examples3.2.1 Quadratic equation3.3 Structured Programming with Functions; Summary; Chapter Exercises; Chapter 4. MATLAB Functions and Data Import-Export Utilities; 4.1 Common Functions; 4.2 Importing and Exporting Data; 4.2.1 The load and save commands; 4.2.2 Exporting text (ASCII) data; 4.2.3 Importing text (ASCII) data; 4.2.4 Exporting and importing binary data; 4.2.5 The Import Wizard; 4.2.6 *Low-level file I/O functions; 4.2.7 *Other import/export functions; Summary; Chapter Exercises; Chapter 5. Logical Vectors; 5.1 Examples; 5.1.1 Discontinuous graphs; 5.1.2 Avoiding division by zero5.1.3 Avoiding infinityThe essential guide to MATLAB as a problem solving tool This text presents MATLAB both as a mathematical tool and a programming language, giving a concise and easy to master introduction to its potential and power. The fundamentals of MATLAB are illustrated throughout with many examples from a wide range of familiar scientific and engineering areas, as well as from everyday life. The new edition has been updated to include coverage of Symbolic Math and SIMULINK. It also adds new examples and applications, and uses the most recent release of Matlab. · New chapters on SNumerical analysisData processingNumerical analysisData processing.510.001251825620.002855369Hahn Brian D771509Valentine D. T.1946-879238MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910780706203321Essential MATLAB for engineers and scientists2055639UNINA