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Engineering LibreTexts

3.9: Scalar Arithmetic with Arrays

  • Page ID
    134992
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    One of the reasons MATLAB is so useful for engineering calculations is that it can perform the same operation on an entire array at once. This is different from doing calculations one value at a time.

    A scalar is a single number. For example, 3, -5, and 12.7 are scalars. When we perform an operation between a scalar and an array, MATLAB applies that operation to every element of the array.

    For example, suppose we create the array:

    myArray = [3 5 10 12];

    If we multiply this array by 3:

    myArray * 3

    MATLAB multiplies every element by 3 and returns:

    ans = [9 15 30 36]

    The operation is applied element by element automatically because one value is a scalar.

    The same idea works with addition, subtraction, and division. This is very convenient because we do not need to write separate commands for each element. MATLAB does the repeated calculation for us.

    For example, suppose an array stores temperatures in degrees Fahrenheit:

    tempF = [32 68 77 95];

    To convert all of these values to degrees Celsius, we can write:

    tempC = (5/9) * (tempF - 32)

    MATLAB subtracts 32 from every element of tempF, then multiplies every result by 5/9.

    The result is:

    tempC = [0 20 25 35]

    This is one of the first examples where we can see the real power of arrays: one line of code can process an entire list of values.

     

    Important Note

    Scalar operations work when one of the values is a single number and the other is an array. MATLAB applies the scalar to every element of the array.

    Example \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Scalar addition

    myArray = [2 4 6]
    
    newArray = myArray + 10

    Solution

    myArray =
    
    2 4 6
    
    
    newArray =
    
    12 14 16

     


    3.9: Scalar Arithmetic with Arrays is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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