TI -86 用户手册

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180
Chapter 13: Matrices
13MATRX.DOC   TI-86, Chap 13, US English   Bob Fedorisko   Revised: 02/13/01 2:32 PM   Printed: 02/13/01 3:03 PM   Page 180 of 10
13MATRX.DOC   TI-86, Chap 13, US English   Bob Fedorisko   Revised: 02/13/01 2:32 PM   Printed: 02/13/01 3:03 PM   Page 180 of 10
Creating a Matrix on the Home Screen
�   Define the start of the matrix with 
ã
, and then
define the start of the first row with another
ã
. Enter each element for the row, separating
them with commas. Define the end of the
first row with 
ä
.
- „ - „
2
 P 
4
 P 
6
 P
8
 -…
�   Define the start of each subsequent row with
ã
 . Enter the row elements, separating each
from the next with a comma. Define the end
of each row with 
ä
. Then define the end of
the matrix with 
ä
.
- „ a 
1
 P
3
 P a 
5
 P
7
 - …
-…
�   Store the matrix to a matrix name. Either
enter a name from one to eight characters
long, starting with a letter, or select a name
from the 
MATRX
 
NAMES
 menu. The matrix
is displayed. If newly created, the matrix
name becomes a 
MATRX NAMES
 menu item.
X - n
ã
M
ä ã
A
ä ã
T
ä
1 1 
1
b
Creating a Complex Matrix
If any matrix element is complex, all elements of the matrix are displayed as complex. For
example, when you enter the matrix  
[[1,2][5,(3,1)]]
, the TI
-86 displays 
[[(1,0) (2,0)][(5,0) (3,1)]]
.
To create a complex matrix from two real matrices with the same dimensions, the syntax is:
realMatrix
+(0,1)
imaginaryMatrixcomplexMatrixName
realMatrix
 contains the real part of each element and imaginaryMatrix contains the
imaginary part of each element.
The close bracket is not
necessary when it precedes
X
.
To delete a matrix name from
memory, use the 
MEM
DELETE:MATRX
 screen
(Chapter 17).