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Calling fsolve from C++
From: |
vicmota |
Subject: |
Calling fsolve from C++ |
Date: |
Fri, 2 May 2014 19:17:52 -0700 (PDT) |
Hello,
I'm a Computer Engineering undergrad student from Brazil and saw a reply in
a thread about using fsolve function inside a C++ program. The post
contained this hints:
1a. prepare your objective function as a C++ function, using Octave's
Array classes as inputs/outputs
1b. wrap it in an octave_builtin object
OR
1ab. prepare your objective as an m-file function
2. initialize Octave interpreter
3. call fsolve through the feval interface (parse.h)
Could you present me a working example in this case? How can I define a
non-linear function just using Array classes? I managed to use feval
interface to run fzero function, but passing an inline function handle and
it works. But how can I represent this set of functions in C++?
function y = f (x)
y = zeros (2, 1);
y(1) = x(1)^2 + x(2)^2 - 36;
y(2) = x(1)^2 - x(2)^2 - 1;
endfunction
[xy, fval] = fsolve ('f', [-5; 5]);
King regards,
Victor Nascimento
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- Calling fsolve from C++,
vicmota <=