From help-octave-request at bevo dot che dot wisc dot edu Fri Jan 22 08:13:57 1999 Subject: FW: step? From: "A. Scottedward Hodel" To: help-octave at bevo dot che dot wisc dot edu Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1999 08:11:57 -0600 I sent this to "El Jeffo" directly, but given the discussion on the mailing list, I thought to send it to all. There IS a step() function in the octave controls toolbox, thanks to Dr. Kai Mueller who contributed it about a year or two ago. A S Hodel Assoc. Prof. Dept Elect Eng, Auburn Univ,AL 36849-5201 On leave at NASA Marshall Space Flight Center (256) 544-1426 Address until 15 Mar 2000:Mail Code ED-13, MSFC, Alabama, 35812 http://www.eng.auburn.edu/~scotte ---------- From: "A. Scottedward Hodel" To: El Jeffo Subject: Re: step? Date: Thu, Jan 21, 1999, 4:59 PM Take a look at the Octave control systems toolbox. I think it's in the bleeding edge releases, v 2.1.12; if not, take a look at ftp://ftp.eng.auburn.edu/pub/hodel/ocst-* A S Hodel Assoc. Prof. Dept Elect Eng, Auburn Univ,AL 36849-5201 On leave at NASA Marshall Space Flight Center (256) 544-1426 Address until 15 Mar 2000:Mail Code ED-13, MSFC, Alabama, 35812 http://www.eng.auburn.edu/~scotte ---------- >From: El Jeffo >To: help-octave at bevo dot che dot wisc dot edu >Subject: step? >Date: Thu, Jan 21, 1999, 6:50 PM > >Anyone familiar with the matlab function "step()" which kinda gives a >graph of some lti system? or can I just steal the step.m file from matlab >and use it in octave? Anyone else ever borrowed .m files from matlab? Is >it legal? (just want a matlab like program for linux cause I don't want >to reboot to windows) > >Jeff > >Microsoft is to software what McDonalds is to gourmet food. > >