This tutorial reviews the functions that Mathematica provides for building and working with matrices, vectors, and tensors. It focuses on functions that are specific to ...
This tutorial reviews the functions that Mathematica provides for carrying out matrix computations. Further information on these functions can be found in standard ...
Sparse representations of matrices are useful because they do not store every element. If one particular value appears very frequently it can be very advantageous to use a ...
Matrices in Mathematica can be constructed from all the different types of objects that Mathematica holds. They can contain machine-precision real and complex floating-point ...
This tutorial covers issues related to performance. One of the challenges of building Mathematica is to make sure that the system is general enough to support symbolic ...
The built-in function Fit finds a least-squares fit to a list of data as a linear combination of the specified basis functions. The functions Regress and DesignedRegress ...
Displaying a map. To make a map of an entire continent, you can give the name of the continent in place of the list of country names. Thus, for example, WorldPlot[Oceania] is ...
This tutorial shows a number of examples of the use of Mathematica for computations that involve linear algebra. Certain sparse matrix techniques try to reorder the matrix so ...