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Cumulative sum with a for loop

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Phil Whitfield
Phil Whitfield on 25 Oct 2017
Commented: Jan on 27 Oct 2017
I need to create a program for 1^2 +2^2 +...+1000^2
Both vectorised and with for loops.
I have managed the vector one I think:
x=1:1000
xsums=cumsum(x.^2)
y=xsums(1000)
however for the the for loop version of the program I can't seem to get it, what I have made is :
x=1:1000
for n = 1:length(x)
y=sum(n.^2)
end
I'm also not even sure if that is the right idea.
any help would be great thanks

Accepted Answer

Andrei Bobrov
Andrei Bobrov on 25 Oct 2017
"I need to create a program for 1^2 +2^2 +...+1000^2"
sum((1:1000).^2)
or
s = 0;
for ii = 1:1000
s = s + ii^2;
end
  5 Comments
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 26 Oct 2017
Edited: Stephen23 on 26 Oct 2017
Going up to 1000 gives the wrong answer. Try something like these:
>> 1+sum((1./(3:2:999))-(1./(2:2:999)))
ans = 0.693647430559821
>> sum(1./(1:2:999))-sum(1./(2:2:999))
ans = 0.693647430559813
loop, gives same output:
>> b = 0;
>> for k=2:2:999, b=b-1/k; end
>> for k=1:2:999, b=b+1/k; end
>> b
b = 0.693647430559823
Note that these only differ at the 14th significant figure.
Jan
Jan on 27 Oct 2017
@Phil:
S = 0;
for a = 1:999
S = S + (-1)^(a-1) / a;
end
Or without the expensive power operation:
S = 0;
m = 1;
for a = 1:999
S = S + m / a;
m = -m;
end

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More Answers (1)

Jan
Jan on 25 Oct 2017
Edited: Jan on 25 Oct 2017
Further solutions:
  • DOT product:
v = 1:n;
s = v * v.';
This uses one temporary vector only, while sum(v .^ 2) needs to create two of them: v and v.^2 .
  • Avoid the squaring: The elements of 1^2, 2^2, 3^2, ... are:
1, 4, 9, 16, 25
The difference is
3, 5, 7, 9
with an obvious pattern. Then:
s = sum(cumsum(1:2:2*n))
This is cheaper as squaring the elements. As loop:
s = 0;
c = 1;
d = 1;
for ii = 1:n
s = s + d;
c = c + 2;
d = d + c;
end
Only additions, but s = s + ii * ii is nicer and slightly faster.
  • Finally remember C.F. Gauss, who provided some methods to process the results of sums efficiently:
s = n * (n+1) * (2*n+1) / 6
Nice!

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