
Our favorite links for this topic area. Enjoy, fellow researchers! Questions, comments, new links? Email eewindow@aol.com!. MATLAB is a numerical computing environment and programming language. Created by The MathWorks, MATLAB allows easy matrix manipulation, plotting of functions and data, implementation of algorithms, creation of user interfaces, and interfacing with programs in other languages. Although it is numeric only, an optional toolbox interfaces with the Maple symbolic engine, allowing access to computer algebra capabilities.
As of 2004, MathWorks has claimed that MATLAB is used by more than one million people across industry and the academic world.[2]
Source: Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matlab)
other great electronics sites:ee toolbox site
matlab
MATLAB is a numerical computing environment and programming language. Created by The MathWorks, MATLAB allows easy matrix manipulation, plotting of functions and data, implementation of algorithms, creation of user interfaces, and interfacing with programs in other languages. Although it is numeric only, an optional toolbox interfaces with the Maple symbolic engine, allowing access to computer algebra capabilities. As of 2004, MathWorks has claimed that MATLAB is used by more than one million people across industry and the academic world.[2]
Source: Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matlab)
(Note: The Electronic Engineers Toolbox provides an alternative set of featured links for this word at http://www.cera2.com/matlab.htm)
Explanation: these links are provided as part of our EE glossary project, which seeks to identify the most prominent keywords in embedded systems, embedded software, realtime and rtos, dsp (digital signal processing), system-on-a-chip, microprocessors and microcontrollers, and other constituent elements for embedded systems. While we seek to keep most of the links up-to-date, the user is refered to other primary electronic-based search sites such as: cera2.com, embedded.com, or EDN Magazine. If you have any suggestions of links or definitions, please email!
Mark Twain quote for the day:
A man's private thought can never be a lie; what he thinks, is to him the truth, always.
- Letter to Louis Pendleton, 8/4/1888