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MATLAB offers more than 100 built-in function application libraries, including the simulation platform Simulink, which extend the use of the program in many application areas?
The combination of a powerful computing core and a development environment with interactive tools made MATLAB the language for engineering calculations.
MATLAB, Simulink and their add-ons find their users wherever it is necessary to quickly and successfully analyze, design, model, simulate and test, but above all to implement the achieved results in the minimum time in practical conditions of the real world - whether in the form of prototypes of new devices or in the form of control programs, innovations and optimizations in production or in the form of solving a complex theoretical problem.
Data can be imported into MATLAB from files, other applications, or external devices. Once your data is in MATLAB, you can analyze it using built-in engineering and math functions, graphs, and visualizations.
The MATLAB environment language supports vector and matrix operations that are essential for solving engineering and scientific problems. Commands can be run one at a time and return results immediately. This will allow you to explore more approaches and arrive at the optimal solution. Scripts, functions or custom classes can be created in the MATLAB environment to automate and reuse your work. In this way, even complex programs and applications can be built. Development tools will facilitate the efficient implementation of your algorithms and the optimization of their computing power.
MATLAB provides not only elements of a traditional programming language, but also tools for designing your own graphical user interfaces.
Application libraries (toolboxes) extend the MATLAB environment by solving tasks from various areas, such as:
MATLAB provides features for sharing your work. Calculation code including results can be automatically published. Algorithms and applications can be distributed as stand-alone executable programs, as components for integration with other software environments, or as portable C source code generated from algorithms built on a subset of MATLAB.