why my plot is not correct?

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wenchong chen
wenchong chen on 11 Apr 2021
Commented: DGM on 11 Apr 2021
here is my code
x = -5:0.1:5
y = x.^(1/3)
plot(x,y)
  2 Comments
wenchong chen
wenchong chen on 11 Apr 2021
it is working, but it is giving me wrong number
wenchong chen
wenchong chen on 11 Apr 2021
also there is a Warning: Imaginary parts of complex X and/or Y arguments ignored.

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Answers (2)

Paul
Paul on 11 Apr 2021
If you're looking for a plot with odd symmetry, try:
plot(x,nthroot(x,3)) % check doc nthroot for details

DGM
DGM on 11 Apr 2021
I'm not sure what you intend the correct number to be. You're doing the cube root of negative numbers. They're going to be complex.
By default, plot() will only plot the real component of complex inputs. If you're expecting the plot to be symmetrical, consider plotting abs(y) to get the magnitude of the complex-valued region.
x = -5:0.1:5;
y = x.^(1/3);
h1=plot(x,real(y)); hold on
h2=plot(x,imag(y));
h3=plot(x,abs(y));
legend([h1,h2,h3],'real','imaginary','magnitude','location','southeast')
  2 Comments
wenchong chen
wenchong chen on 11 Apr 2021
the^1/3 of negative numbers should be negative right? why both negative and positive side are both positive number?
DGM
DGM on 11 Apr 2021
You probably want Paul's answer below. nthroot() calculates the real root, whereas power() or .^ calculates the complex root. The web docs include such an example.

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