dimension of matrices must be identical) and division is the same as multiplication (dimension must be in the order of A(mxn)*\/B(nxk) where n is the common dimension): to divide one element by another you just multiply it by 1/value (part or all of the elements can multiply while part or all of the elements divide):
so for example matrix addition of matrices A(2x2): {2,-1}{1,2} and B(2,2): {3,-5}{4,-2} will result in matrix C(2x2):{5,-6}{5,0}. subtraction of those matrices will result in D(2x2): {-1,4}{-3,4}
Division of matrices A(2x2): {2,0.5}{2,4} and B(2x1) :{2}{2} will result in matrix C(2x1): {1+0.25}{1+2}={1.25,3}. Multiplication of those matrices will result in D(2x1):{4+1}{4+8}={5,12}.…
a follow up question... how do I wrap a list onto itself at a certain frequency?
i.e. I want the list {1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9}
to become {1,4,7; 2,6,8; 3,6,9} wrapped every 3rd item
Added by Joshua Jordan at 5:30pm on November 17, 2012
the curves on surface issue it's solved seting flatten to the surface control point output. Still didnt know how to group points like:
1;1, 2;2, 3;3.....
1;2, 2;3, 3;4....
1;3, 2;4, 3;5...
....
o relate to each plane its sections i.e.:
paths=624 - {0;0;2;0}(N=1)
the number of section planes is 70 and somewhere I have 4 section lines and somewhere 5 or 8, is it clear?
1 plane = 1 set of sections
thank you for helping me.…
Added by paul piciorul at 5:35am on October 28, 2010
ee 3)
{5}
0 15
{6}
0 16
And I want to place points at every possible combination of these coordinates, treating Tree 1 as X coordinates, Tree 2 as Y coordinates, and Tree 3 as Z coordinates. Also, I would like the list of points to be a tree with paths corresponding to the coordinates. Wouldn't it be nice if I could plug these trees into a Point XYZ, with a new "branch cross reference" method, and get the following result?
{0:3:5}
0 {10.0, 13.0, 15.0}
{0:3:6}
0 {10.0, 13.0, 16.0}
{0:4:5}
0 {10.0, 14.0, 15.0}
{0:4:6}
0 {10.0, 14.0, 16.0}
{1:3:5}
0 {11.0, 13.0, 15.0}
{1:3:6}
0 {11.0, 13.0, 16.0}
{1:4:5}
0 {11.0, 14.0, 15.0}
{1:4:6}
0 {11.0, 14.0, 16.0}
{2:3:5}
0 {12.0, 13.0, 15.0}
{2:3:6}
0 {12.0, 13.0, 16.0}
{2:4:5}
0 {12.0, 14.0, 15.0}
{2:4:6}
0 {12.0, 14.0, 16.0}
In this form of cross referencing, every combination of individual branches from the different lists is used as separate input, and the output for each combination is put onto a branch in the result whose path is the concatenation of the input branch paths used.…
Added by Andy Edwards at 7:03pm on November 3, 2009