Hmmm. It's a bit hard to search for syntax with punctuation marks in google - I'm a bit confused about X = [ones(m, 1), data(:,1)]; specifically data(:,1)
and you cropped out the top/bottom rows and left/right columns because of the large discontinuity between them... assuming that this image is a periodic signal.
In mathematics, the discrete Fourier transform (DFT) converts a finite list of equally spaced samples of a function into the list of coefficients of a finite combination of complex sinusoids, ordered by their frequencies, that has those same sample values. It can be said to convert the sampled function from its original domain (often time or position along a line) to the frequency domain.
The input samples are complex numbers (in practice, usually real numbers), and the output coefficients are complex as well. The frequencies of the output sinusoids are integer multiples of a fundamental frequency...
I'm happy to have made this public, for your review guys: 2D Affine Transforms 101 https://github.com/legends2k/2d-transforms-101/#2d-affine-transforms-101
OK. Lines 3 and 4 define a set of x and y values. x is theta0 and y is theta1.
The next part is a pair of for loops that iterate over each unique pair of theta0 and theta1 which computes the cost function of your data values given a pair of theta0 and theta1.
These are stored in a matrix called J_vals
However, with the way the matrix is currently defined, the origin is assumed to be at the top-left corner.
You need the origin to be at the BOTTOM-LEFT corner when you're plotting things... just like in Cartesian coordinates.
to make the origin go from the top-left corner to the bottom-left.
The next command is surfwhich plots a surface plot.
it's a 3D plot where the first input is a set of x values, the next input is a set of y values, and the last value is 2D matrix that corresponds to each unique (x,y) pair.
let's do an example... suppose that theta0 = [-1 0 1]
and theta1 = [1 2 3]
what will happen is that you will now get a 3 x 3 grid of spatial coordinates. Assuming that theta0 is on the x and theta1 is on the y, it would look like this (remember that bottom-left is the origin)
Well I wouldn't be too surprised since it does show :)
Sounds awesome though, I'd totally pay 45 bucks for you to tutor me for an hour later on haha
In the silicon valley, I've gotten tutors for history/math who never really done much and their average wage was like 40 dollars per hour...
I think maybe it's because of the desperate asian parents trying to boost the GPA's of the kids, or the fact that people are too competitive about grades, but
if you came to SV to tutor people about comp sci, I think you'd make like 70$ per hour doing that kind of stuff ^_^
Well anyways, I'll be back! Gotta go get my work out in - be back in an hour or two perhaps
Yeah the M.*cumsum(M) is a great trick to know. There have been many times where I wanted to replace a sparse column of 1s with an incremental counter going from 1 up to as many non-zero entries.
It's good to know without the use of indexing. Great for golfing.
Disclaimer - Edit on September 16th, 2015
This post has significantly changed due to a small yet fundamental flaw in my understanding of the derivative operation in the frequency domain. A lot of this post has changed since the previous iteration.
I would like to thank Luis Mendo for helping m...
mwoah, I especially don't like them mutilating a beautiful language and using absolutely arbitrary units, for which you should be ceremonially crucified.
@rayryeng I did a lot of petroleum courses during my Earth Sciences bachelor. It's about the most conservative business on Earth, so all assignment were in imperial units and thus 85% failed the class because no-one could make head or tails of it.
Imperial are for bakers, the unruly rebels who dare to disestablish the hallowed systems of our 21st century mathematicians - a truly terrifying thought
To fool the tall good and smart system manager.The rich rich and tall and good system manager suggested it.He wanted it that way.The programmer suggested it.
Thanks for mentioning me in the post! In the first equation with the Fourier transform (shift theorem), I think m should be 1 (or an m is missing in the RHS) @rayryeng
Does Matlab Coder in Matlab-r2014b support parfor?
If I check at http://uk.mathworks.com/help/simulink/ug/functions-supported-for-code-generation--alphabetical-list.html, it reports:
"Treated as a for-loop in a MATLAB Function block".
Does that mean that there is no speed reduction?