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04:41
@SardarUsama Inf is a really large number. Even if it is not really a concrete number, it has a unique place on the real axis. You can think of it as the float value that is to the right of all other float values. -Inf is the one at the left end.
NaN, on the other hand, is an error state. It is not any value on the axis. It is a flag saying that an impossible computation was attempted. As such, it would be weird to give it any sort of ordering w.r.t. other values. What they did then was not give it an order w.r.t. itself either. It makes some sort of sense.
-10/0 == log(0) is a bit strange, but both are really large negative numbers, it is reasonable to equate them. 0/0 == log(-1) would be a real stretch, though. 0/0 is meaningless, and so is log(-1) (though MATLAB seems to assign a complex value to it?), making those things compare equal would be weird, no?
Something different -- A user was removed, I lost 2 rep. What actions from a user could have given me 2 rep? All I can think of is 1 upvote and 4 downvotes, but I don't think I had collected that many downvotes...
05:24
@CrisLuengo accepting an answer of theirs which was deleted in the aftermath?
@CrisLuengo log(-1) is not really meaningless. I guess MATLAB takes the principal branch of the complex logarithm
log(z) = ln(|z|) + i*arg(z) + k*2*pi*i, where the Log(z), which is called the principal branch, is defined for k=0
So log(-1) = log(|-1|)+pi*i
05:41
@Adriaan Ah! That makes sense.
@Adriaan In C and C++, log is defined as returning a real value, and so log(-1) is NaN. en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/numeric/math/log
MATLAB's known to have been built for scientists, and those are more likely to use the logarithm of negative numbers I'd guess
Yes, and C didn't have complex numbers until the C99 standard (published in 1999).
So until 20 years ago, if you wanted to do something with complex numbers, you had to build the infrastructure yourself.
No idea, until 20 years ago I was maximum 6 years old :p
btb, why are you awake? Isn't it like 2 in the morning where you're at?
05:47
I see that C++ defines a complex log, if the input is a complex value, you can compute log(-1). en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/numeric/complex/log
It's a quarter to midnight.
oh, that's a long way off
I'm about to head to uni :P
We're 8 hours behind you guys.
I get to sleep for 6 hours now, while you work hard towards that degree. :)
and culturally 8 centuries? :D
Close to that, yes. And that gap is widening every day!
06:05
@CrisLuengo you have just 2 questions without an accepted answer, and both do not have deleted answers. All I can think of otherwise is that your question was deleted along, which I can't check, and that you lost rep due to a question which you edited when you were still <2k which has now been deleted.
@Adriaan I have no recently deleted questions. And there would be no reason for them to delete a question of mine because an answerer was deleted. Also, when they delete a user, their posts are not deleted. I double-checked all answers I accepted, their authors still have accounts (and why did I have to answer so many of my own questions?)
Maybe a post that I edited <2k was deleted, that is possible. Not sure that would be rolled into a user being deleted.
Questions can be deleted along with user deletions. Usually only happens on sock detection though, and those are often sooner detected than years later
37
Q: Rep loss due to deletion of a year old post I edited

AdriaanI thought old rep (> 60 days) was supposed to be exempt from being deducted when old posts are deleted. Is this incorrect? Where can I find documentation for this? Details: On 3rd September I incurred a loss of 8 reputation due to removal of posts, see this screenshot of my reputation changes...

brb, off to uni
06:23
@Adriaan Cute! A screen shot from when you were little and didn't yet have your gold MATLAB badge! :)
06:45
@CrisLuengo well, I still do not have that badge (and will not for quite some time)
If the trend over the past 3 years continues as-is, I'll have it in a year (~250 upvotes/yr).
I don't consistently answer though, if you see my rep-graph I answer in bunches and batches
Ah, I was confused.
apparently I'm just 6 votes away from bronze in ...
@Adriaan or <= 6 retags
it's that a bronze badge is useless :P
getting 231 MATLAB votes is a lot more tough alas
I just DV and CV most posts I see, or I have no idea what's going on
a mod scared this dude away. I was always confused whether those comments are considered rude or not.
@SardarUsama not a mod you often come across
08:06
oh, "rude" comments... is this rude? stackoverflow.com/questions/51919017/…
@Andy yours might be considered "unfriendly", theirs, not sure. He did answer part of your question btb, just not the "which version" part
and not the "what are you doing to trigger your problem"
which is in my eyes the most important parts
ignorance of the OP, I would say. but not rudeness imo
08:29
Argh!
Thanks, I'll check this out. I'm not sure at all I can use a uifigure though, as the axes are actually inside a quite complex GUI (with tabs, lots of controls and callbacks, custom menus...), which of course the test script was not replicating as it was irrelevant until your answer :). I'll have to check uifigure limitations (if any) and whether I could "just" make this whole GUI a uifigure instead of a figure. — Parker Lewis 9 mins ago
08:41
Unintentional chameleon question...?
 
1 hour later…
09:52
0
Q: MATLAB multi-threading

Mr. Deng I used a host computer software to collect some data in real time and temporarily store it in memory. I want to use MATLAB to read the data in memory, is there a corresponding function or API? Similar to multi-threaded reading of data in memory, a software network writes data in memory, MATLAB...

beautiful image, very clear
10:41
hehe :-D
 
3 hours later…
13:44
Does it make sense to "click" a keyboard button and "press" a mouse button? I interchanged those words by mistake in an answer.
I think one can "press" a mouse, but cannot "click" a keyboard
14:26
Some keyboards say ‘click’ when you press a key.
14:41
lol
Mechanical keyboards would like to have a word with you
Personally I would call it clicking a mouse and pressing a key
that's clack, not click ;)
Minor detail
I wonder why clicking the keyboard sounds so weird. My vague notion is that clicking (a mouse) is a binary event: you issue a single click (and your moving your fingers before and after are just an inevitable detail). Whereas a keypress is a smooth thing where the press is more than an instantaneous toggling. I know keypresses aren't pressure-sensitive (inb4 hipster keyboard that is), but still.
 
3 hours later…
17:35
Dumb question alert. Many (most? all?) builtin functions that describe an action on a scalar are applied element by element when called with vectors and matrixes, right?.
s this an automatic property of functions or is there something that I need to do to get my functions to work that way too?
Does it matter if the function takes multiple arguments.
the keyword you may be looking for is "broadcasting", that or "vectorization"
it depends a lot on what your function is doing
If your function does arithmetic operations then you can do it such that it automagically extends elementwise to array-valued inputs. Just use .* and ./ and .^ as elementwise operators, for instance
so it's not automatic at all, but depending on your function you can possibly make it work with little to no effort
@dmckee Here's somewhere to start...
88
Q: Map function in MATLAB?

user121550I'm a little surprised that MATLAB doesn't have a Map function, so I hacked one together myself since it's something I can't live without. Is there a better version out there? Is there a somewhat-standard functional programming library for MATLAB out there that I'm missing? function results = ...

Is arrayfun one of those slow loop-hiding wrappers?
@AndrasDeak Probably
Thanks guys. I should have figured the .[op] form was in play.
17:40
What is that form?
I've taken a new job and one of my first tasks is to integrate a number of tools written in matlab, but I have only a passing familiarity with the language.
@SardarUsama Did you see the suggestion by Andras Deak? The operators .*, ./ and so on are applied to vectors or matricies one elements at a time rather than meaning "multiply/divide/exponentiate these objects according to the rules of linear algebra" as a plain *, /, ^ does.
okay so what is .[op] form?
dot followed by some operator
i see
Bingo. Sorry for the confusion.
@AndrasDeak yep
@Wolfie are they still slow? I thought those were equally good now
17:58
They're faster than they used to be, but they're still likely going to be slower than the explicit loop because they contain additional checks that an explicit loop won't do
Whether or not it's worth fretting over is dependent on the operation
I'd wager that most of the time it's probably not significant enough to worry about
right. .
18:35
@SardarUsama I think unless you're operating on a huge array, they're basically equivalent. I make the usage decision on readability vs being concise, not performance
 
4 hours later…

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