Difference between revisions of "Transpose Command"
From GeoGebra Manual
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
{{command|vector-matrix}} | {{command|vector-matrix}} | ||
; Transpose[Matrix]: Transposes the matrix. | ; Transpose[Matrix]: Transposes the matrix. | ||
− | : {{Example|1=<code>Transpose[{{1, 2,3}, {4,5,6},{7,8,9}}]</code> gives you the matrix <math>\begin{pmatrix}1&4&7\\ 2&5&8\\ 3&6&9\end{pmatrix}</math>.}} | + | : {{Example|1=<code>Transpose[{{1,2,3},{4,5,6},{7,8,9}}]</code>gives you the matrix <math>\begin{pmatrix}1&4&7\\ 2&5&8\\ 3&6&9\end{pmatrix}</math>.}} |
==CAS Syntax== | ==CAS Syntax== | ||
; Transpose[Matrix]: Transposes the matrix. | ; Transpose[Matrix]: Transposes the matrix. | ||
− | : {{Example|1=<code>Transpose[{{a, b}, {c, d}}]</code> gives you the matrix <math> | + | : {{Example|1=<code>Transpose[{{a, b}, {c, d}}]</code> gives you the matrix<math>\begin{pmatrix}a&c\\b&d\end{pmatrix}</math> .}} |
Revision as of 10:39, 11 August 2011
- Transpose[Matrix]
- Transposes the matrix.
- Example:
Transpose[{{1,2,3},{4,5,6},{7,8,9}}]
gives you the matrix \begin{pmatrix}1&4&7\\ 2&5&8\\ 3&6&9\end{pmatrix}.
CAS Syntax
- Transpose[Matrix]
- Transposes the matrix.
- Example:
Transpose[{{a, b}, {c, d}}]
gives you the matrix\begin{pmatrix}a&c\\b&d\end{pmatrix} .