1

I have this matrix

A1 = [7.4011 9.8999 1.9990; 7.4011 9.8988 1.9990; 7.4011 9.8999 1.9990]

A1 =
      7.4011   9.8999   1.9990
      7.4011   9.8988   1.9990
      7.4011   9.8999   1.9990

but when I execute the instruction det(A1) I get the following error:

error: det: invalid dense matrix type

What is happening?

I tried looking in the web about this error but I have not been able to find anything.

Thanks

9
  • 1
    are you using a matlab clone (e.e. Octave)?
    – Rasman
    May 18, 2012 at 4:14
  • 3
    If I cut and paste your code Matlab R2012a returns 0. Try clearing A1 and re-doing. May 18, 2012 at 4:39
  • 2
    The code works for me in MATLAB R2012a, GNU Octave 3.6.1 and Scilab 5.3.3. All these return a determinant of 0. So the code seems to be correct.
    – nrz
    May 18, 2012 at 5:44
  • 1
    One possible problem occurred to me, however not related to MATLAB specifically: in some keyboard layouts it's very easy to accidentally type an invisible character, and in Linux console this caused me some strange problems before I found it out by myself and changed my keyboard layout to avoid accidental typing of invisible non-blank characters. If copy-pasted code works for you but still you encounter the same problem (or other strange problems) every now and then when you type the code, then the problem might be an invisible typo.
    – nrz
    May 18, 2012 at 5:54
  • 1
    Oh yes. Im using Octave. Is that the problem?
    – camelCase
    May 18, 2012 at 13:29

1 Answer 1

0

Well, I recommend you to download the latest Octave version on http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/download.html, as said @WarrenWeckesser. It would be a issue of that old version you used.

I just installed Octave-3.6.1-mingw + octaveforge pkgs for Windows (http://wiki.octave.org/Octave_for_Windows), and it functioned perfectly! With det(A1):

ans = 0

Since at least two lines on that matrix are equals, the result determinant must be zero!

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