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9:49 AM
@CrisLuengo could be. At least it's the official support channel, i.e. when employees answers in a company capacity, they'll be doing it there. People such as Edric, who do answe ron SO, always clearly state on their profile that "their opinions do not reflect those of the company" or a similar legal disclaimer
 
 
4 hours later…
1:40 PM
@Adriaan Sure. And there certainly are a lot of answers by staff. But I don’t know if they have any staff specifically hired to answer on MATLAB Answers.
Here, this is what I was referring to:
That’s the list of most active users in the last week. The first staff members are at 8, 14 and 16.
 
humm isn't Jan staff too?
ah well, he does not have the staff label
 
2:16 PM
Having a discussion in the python room about unparenthesized power operations and their order of evaluation that's relevant to MATLAB
in Python, 21 mins ago, by Kevin
> However, when using operator notation [for exponentiation] with a caret (^) or arrow (↑), there is no common standard.[19] For example, Microsoft Excel and computation programming language MATLAB evaluate a^b^c as (a^b)^c, but Google Search and Wolfram Alpha as a^(b^c). Thus 4^3^2 is evaluated to 4,096 in the first case and to 262,144 in the second case.
Python parses a**b**c as a**(b**c), while MATLAB parses a^b^c as (a^b)^c.
Out of curiosity I tried fortran, and it does what python does.
in Python, 3 mins ago, by Andras Deak
Which is surprising because in this regard MATLAB breaks fortran behaviour
 
interesting
this is why its better to be clear I think, and use parenthesis often
 
yeah, I would absolutely never use such an expression without parentheses, even if I could remember the behaviour of the given language
 
interesting the mention of the arrow operator
is there any language that contains that by default?
 
Maybe something silly like APL, and I bet wolfram language does. But nothing sane, I bet.
 
2:42 PM
posted on April 12, 2021 by Johanna Pingel

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3:23 PM
There's MATLAB, there's MATL, and now there's MATLA
-5
Q: How to simulate in MATLA

lixiaobinI am writing my paper, now need to use matlab to make a set of data, hope to get your help, all the details are in the attached picture, thank you.

(there are so many things wrong about that question)
 
 
2 hours later…
5:00 PM
@CrisLuengo ah. I don't know either whether they hire people especially for that. Given the activity of staff there, rather than here, I do assume they somehow need to spend a given amount of time as "outreach" or similar (or just see this as an easy distraction from work)
 
 
2 hours later…
7:29 PM
 
 
2 hours later…
9:41 PM
@AndrasDeak it's quite intersting as this is one of the few operators where it is not so straightforward whether left- or right associativity makes more sense. In many langaugaes the operators are all left associative just to have a nice left to right evaluation. In Haskell you do frequently define your own operators (and there is a ton of them), and as you also rarely have to use parenthesis you are much more aware of what has what kind of associativity (and of course the precedence).
 
I couldn't think of another arithmetic operator in python that's right-to-left
 
many operators are commutative where it is not so noticeable
 
*associative?
 
if they are associative it is even less noticeable:)
 
of course with floats nothing really is :P
 
9:49 PM
can we maybe consider in python the assignment "operator" as right-associative too?
like a = b = 3
 
no
that assigns vallues left to right
>>> a = a[0] = [[]]
>>> a
[[...]]
@LuisMendo oh boy, I missed that
 
oh thats a nice one, I was about to write a class with custom setters:P
 

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