Difference between revisions of "Transpose Command"
From GeoGebra Manual
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:{{example|1=<div><code><nowiki>Transpose({{a, b}, {c, d}})</nowiki></code> yields the matrix<math>\begin{pmatrix}a&c\\b&d\end{pmatrix}</math>.</div>}} | :{{example|1=<div><code><nowiki>Transpose({{a, b}, {c, d}})</nowiki></code> yields the matrix<math>\begin{pmatrix}a&c\\b&d\end{pmatrix}</math>.</div>}} | ||
+ | {{note| 1=<div> | ||
+ | * See also [[Eigenvalues Command]], [[Eigenvectors Command]], [[SVD Command]], [[Invert Command]], [[JordanDiagonalization Command]] | ||
+ | </div>}} |
Revision as of 15:08, 26 June 2018
- Transpose( <Matrix> )
- Transposes the matrix.
- Example:
Transpose({{1, 2, 3}, {4, 5, 6}, {7, 8, 9}})
yields 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}})
yields the matrix\begin{pmatrix}a&c\\b&d\end{pmatrix}.