Graphics Programs Reference
In-Depth Information
It is important to understand that your M-book can be handled in exactly
the same way that you would any Word document. In particular, you can
save the file, print the document, change fonts or margins, move or export a
graphic, etc. This has the advantage of allowing you to present the results
of your MATLAB session in an attractively formatted style. It also has the
disadvantage of affording the user the opportunity to muck with MATLAB's
inputoroutputandsotocreateinputandoutputthatmaynottrulycorrespond
to eachother. One must be very careful!
Note that the
help
item on the menu bar is Word help, not MATLAB help. If
you want to invoke MATLAB help, then either type
help
(with
CTRL+ENTER
of course) or bring the MATLAB Command Window to the foreground (see
below) and use MATLAB help in the usual fashion.
The Notebook Menu
Next let's examine the items in the
Notebook
menu. First comes
Define
Input Cell
. If you put your cursor on any line and select
Define Input Cell
,
then that line will become an input line. But to evaluate it, you still need to
press
CTRL+ENTER
. The advantage to this item is apparent when you want to
create an input cell containing more than one line. For example, type
syms x y
factor(xˆ2 - yˆ2)
and then select both lines (by clicking and dragging over them) and choose
DefineInputCell
.
CTRL+ENTER
will then cause
both
lines to be evaluated. You
can recognize that both lines are incorporated into one input cell by looking at
the brackets, or
Cell Markers
. The menu item
Hide Cell Markers
will cause
the Cell Markers to disappear; in fact that menu item is a toggle switch that
turns the Markers on and off. If you have several input cells, you can convert
them into one input cell by selecting them and choosing
GroupCells
. You can
break them apart by choosing
Ungroup Cells
. If you click in an input cell
and choose
Undefine Cells
, that cell ceases to be an input cell; its formatting
reverts to the default Word format, as does the corresponding output cell. If
you “undefine” an output cell, it loses its format, but the corresponding input
cell remains unchanged.
If you select some portion of your M-book (for example, the entire M-book
by using
Edit
:
Select All
) and then choose
Purge Output Cells
, all output
cells in the selection will be deleted. This is particularly useful if you wish
to change some data on which the output in your selection depends, and then
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