sin(x)^2

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Eth
Eth on 8 Apr 2019
Commented: John D'Errico on 22 Nov 2022
How to expand a function like sin(x)^2 to output 1/2*(1-cos(2*x))? I tried expand(sin(x)^2) but it returns the same.

Accepted Answer

Star Strider
Star Strider on 8 Apr 2019
Use the rewrite function:
syms x
ys = sin(x)^2;
ye = rewrite(ys, 'exp')
yc = rewrite(expand(ye), 'cos')
p[roducing:
yc =
1/2 - cos(2*x)/2
  2 Comments
Eth
Eth on 8 Apr 2019
Thanks.
Star Strider
Star Strider on 8 Apr 2019
As always, my pleasure.

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More Answers (2)

Hose Orlando
Hose Orlando on 3 Aug 2020
how do i put this matrix into matlab
  1 Comment
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 3 Aug 2020
syms A B C
[sin(A)^2, sin(B)^2, sin(C)^2
cos... etc

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Carlos Guerrero García
Carlos Guerrero García on 22 Nov 2022
Perhaps the following lines will be useful:
syms x; % Establishing 'x' as a symbolic variable
combine(sin(x)^2,'sincos') % For the 1st (original) question
ans = 
combine(sin(x)^3,'sincos') % For the last question
ans = 
  1 Comment
John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 22 Nov 2022
Note that combine is a useful tool, but one we see mentioned here rarely. So...
help sym/combine
combine Combine terms of the same algebraic structure. combine(S) tries to rewrite products of powers in the expression S as a single power. combine(S, T) combines several calls to the target function T in the expression f to a single call. The target T is specified as one of the strings 'atan', 'exp', 'gamma', 'log', 'sincos', 'sinhcosh'. combine(..., 'IgnoreAnalyticConstraints',VAL) controls the level of mathematical rigor to use on the analytical constraints while combining (branch cuts, division by zero, and so on). Here, VAL can be TRUE or FALSE. If you use TRUE, then combine uses a set of mathematical rules, such as ln(a) + ln(b) = ln(a*b), that are not generally correct, but can give simpler results. The default is FALSE. Examples: combine(2^x * 3^x) returns 6^x combine((2^x)^i) returns (2^x)^i combine((2^x)^i, 'IgnoreAnalyticConstraints', true) returns 2^(x*i) combine(log(x) + log(y), 'log') returns log(x) + log(y) combine(log(x) + log(y), 'log', 'IgnoreAnalyticConstraints', true) returns log(x*y) See also sym/simplify, sym/expand, sym/factor Documentation for sym/combine doc sym/combine

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