Why Does int() of rectangularPulse Return NaN?

1 view (last 30 days)
syms t real
x(t) = rectangularPulse(0,1,t);
int(x(t),t,0,5)
ans = 
1
int(x(t),t,0,inf)
ans = 
NaN
int(x(t),t,-10,10)
ans = 
1
int(x(t),t,-inf,inf)
ans = 
NaN
Any ideas why those two cases return NaN?
  1 Comment
Paul
Paul on 25 May 2022
Fixed in 2022a
syms t real
x(t) = rectangularPulse(0,1,t);
int(x(t),t,0,inf)
ans = 
1
int(x(t),t,-inf,inf)
ans = 
1
int(rectangularPulse(0,1,t),-2,inf)
ans = 
1

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 9 Jul 2021
Work-around:
syms b x t real
assume(b>=0)
y(t) = rectangularPulse(x,1,t)
y(t) = 
z = int(y,t,0,b)
z = 
limit(z, b, inf)
ans = 
  4 Comments
Paul
Paul on 10 Jul 2021
Edited: Paul on 10 Jul 2021
Just seems so strange because int() handles much more complex functions, which is just about any function, with ease. I'll see what Tech Support says about this.
Another interesting result:
syms t real
int(rectangularPulse(0,1,t),-inf,2)
ans = 
1
int(rectangularPulse(0,1,t),-2,inf)
ans = 
NaN
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 10 Jul 2021
I have a suspicion that somewhere along the way, a dirac(0) is getting invoked.

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (0)

Products


Release

R2021a

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!