Why would I be getting "NaN" from a matrix I entered?

4 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Jack B
Jack B le 24 Oct 2014
Commenté : Sean de Wolski le 28 Oct 2014
Hey all,
I seem to be getting a "NaN" from a matrix I entered as a variable while using the function griddata. Is there any obvious reason for this? Possibly difficulty interpolating a value?
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Patrik Ek
Patrik Ek le 24 Oct 2014
Modifié(e) : Patrik Ek le 24 Oct 2014
You have nan in your matrix? Your matrix was created with nan. Your input data is wrong? You are a victim of a practical joke involving team mates and corruption of data? Your computer decided that it wanted a retirement?...
Sorry, but no one is all knowing. The does most likely come from a bug in the implementation. Then we need to know where it went wrong. There is many ways to get nan, so the problem is what you did to get nan.

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Star Strider
Star Strider le 24 Oct 2014
We need to see your code. My guess is that you’re asking it to extrapolate.
  3 commentaires
Star Strider
Star Strider le 28 Oct 2014
My pleasure!
The griddata function won’t allow you to extrapolate, but interpn and some of its friends will. (The interpolation-extrapolation functions have different capabilities.) You may have to experiment to find a function that does what you want. Fortunately, they seem to share the same general argument list syntax.
There are several helpful links to other functions at the end of the griddata and other documentation pages that can help guide your search.
Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski le 28 Oct 2014
scatteredInterpolant supports extrapolation with a few different methods.

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Image Analyst
Image Analyst le 24 Oct 2014
Maybe you entered the letter "o" instead of zero?

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