Tuesday, June 10, 2014

MATLAB Seminars at University of Washington June 19th

MathWorks would like invite you to a pair of free technical seminars being held at the University of Washington – Seattle Campus on Thursday June 19th, in HUB rom 332.

Please register if you plan to attend either or both sessions so we can plan accordingly for seating and hand outs:


Topics and agendas are:
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9:45 – 10:00 AM Registration and sign-in. Walk ins are welcome.

10:00 AM – Noon – Session 1:

Introduction to MATLAB for Non-programmers

In this session, you will learn how MATLAB can be used to visualize and analyze data, perform numerical computations, and develop algorithms. Through live demonstrations and examples, you will see how MATLAB can help you become more effective. This session is targeted for new to MATLAB users. However, experienced MATLAB users may also benefit from the session, as the engineer will be covering some tips and tricks from the newer releases of MATLAB.

Highlights include:

Accessing data from many sources (files, other software, hardware, etc.)
Using interactive tools for iterative exploration, design, and problem solving
Automating and capturing your work in easy-to-write scripts and programs
Sharing your results with others by automatically creating reports

We’ll end the session with open Q&A

No prior knowledge of MATLAB is required.

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1:15 – 1:30 PM Registration and sign-in. Walk ins are welcome.

1:30 – 3:30 PM – Session 2:

Programming with MATLAB

In this session, you will learn more about programming capabilities in MATLAB and to learn how to be more productive working with MATLAB.  MATLAB is a high-level language that includes mathematical functions for solving engineering and scientific problems.  You can produce immediate results by interactively executing commands one at a time.  However, MATLAB also provides features of traditional programming languages, including flow control, error handling, and object-oriented programming (OOP). 

Topics covered will include:

Basics of the MATLAB programming language
Building robust, maintainable functions
Tools for efficient program development
Using objects and authoring classes in MATLAB

We’ll end the session with open Q&A

Users with some prior MATLAB knowledge or other programming experience will benefit most from this session.