Phase Shift Sawtooth Wave

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Ethan
Ethan on 15 Oct 2020
Answered: Ethan on 16 Oct 2020
Hi everyone,
I am trying to plot a triangular wave for a specified time using the sawtooth function in Matlab. The user inputs values for T_amp, T_freq, and ft and the code then calculates the sawtooth and plots the function vs time, ft.
When plotted, the plot shows the sawtooth starting at -T_amp. I was wondering if there was a way to shift the function so that the sawtooth starts at 0, where the first point would be (0,0) instead of (0, -T_amp). If anyone could help me out with this, I would really appreciate it. Thanks!
tri = T_amp*sawtooth(T_freq*ft, .5);
plot(ft, tri;)

Accepted Answer

Ethan
Ethan on 16 Oct 2020
The sawtooth function does not automatically account for the 2*pi required to plot with frequency. To add a phase shift, you can do the same as if it were a sign wave by adding or subtracting your phase:
tri = sawtooth(2*pi*T_freq*ft+(pi/2), .5);

More Answers (1)

Jon
Jon on 15 Oct 2020
Edited: Jon on 15 Oct 2020
if you just want to shift it so that it starts at (0,0):
tri = T_amp*sawtooth(T_freq*ft, .5) + T_amp;
Note that with the above tri will range from 0 to 2*T_amp,
if you actually wanted it to range from 0 to T_amp you could use:
tri = T_amp/2*sawtooth(T_freq*ft, .5) + T_amp/2;
  6 Comments
Jon
Jon on 15 Oct 2020
Oh even better, just feeding the sawtooth with the shifted angles
Jon
Jon on 16 Oct 2020
It would be good to either post your solution as an answer and then accept it, or accept this thread and let people find it in the comments just so that others who might have a similar question will know there is an answer available

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