Solving a system of equations

Solving a system of equations - Messages

#1 Posted: 2/10/2009 2:39:01 PM
sleschke

sleschke

0 likes in 13 posts.

Group: User

Hello Smath,

is there a way of solving a complete system of equations?

Lets say I have a set of 10 equations with 10 variables
and I am looking for the vector of values for the 10 variables
so that all 10 equations are true.
The equations may be nonlinear, contain all kinds of arithmetic expressions
and complex values.

Is this already possible, or will it be implemented in a future version?
#2 Posted: 2/10/2009 3:42:42 PM
Andrey Ivashov

Andrey Ivashov

2269 likes in 3729 posts.

Group: Super Administrator

I was ready to answer something like: system of the linear equations you can solve with matrices, f.e.:

But it was before you said:
Wrote

The equations may be nonlinear, contain all kinds of arithmetic expressions
and complex values.


So, the result answer is: implementation of this feature will be the one of the next steps...
#3 Posted: 6/23/2009 10:49:42 AM
Radovan Omorjan

Radovan Omorjan

325 likes in 2052 posts.

Group: Moderator

There is "solve" for a single equation. I could see on the Side panel under "Functions" that there is a "Equation systems" template (v.08).
Could you please explain in short how does it work?

Best Regards
When Sisyphus climbed to the top of a hill, they said: "Wrong boulder!"
#4 Posted: 6/23/2009 12:47:27 PM
Andrey Ivashov

Andrey Ivashov

2269 likes in 3729 posts.

Group: Super Administrator

Hello, omorr.
Wrote

There is "solve" for a single equation. I could see on the Side panel under "Functions" that there is a "Equation systems" template (v.08).
Could you please explain in short how does it work?


"Equation systems" template created not for solving sets of equations, it was created to work with +/- and -/+ operators. Here is example below:
[LIVE width=180 height=200]http://smath.info/live/?lang=rus&file=100[/LIVE]
Also you can work with that construction as a specific array:
[LIVE width=258 height=105]http://smath.info/live/?file=469[/LIVE]
#5 Posted: 6/23/2009 3:23:43 PM
Radovan Omorjan

Radovan Omorjan

325 likes in 2052 posts.

Group: Moderator

Thanks for the explanation.

As soon as posted I realised that I missed the point.

I should have played a bit more with SMath first, sorry.

Regards,
Radovan
When Sisyphus climbed to the top of a hill, they said: "Wrong boulder!"
  • New Posts New Posts
  • No New Posts No New Posts