Difference between revisions of "Dynamic using arrays"
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
− | * [[Dynamic]] | + | * [[Dynamic]] |
<footer>Dynamic initial values / {{PAGENAME}} / Dynamic dependencies</footer> | <footer>Dynamic initial values / {{PAGENAME}} / Dynamic dependencies</footer> |
Revision as of 22:35, 17 May 2016
The initial value of a dynamic variable — that is, the first parameter to the Dynamic function — can be a number, variable identifier, or other expression that evaluates to a single number, list, or array. Analytica evaluates a dynamic variable starting from each initial value, in each time period, so the result is a correctly dimensioned array.
Example: Expanding the example (see Dynamic function), suppose the inflation rate of gasoline is uncertain. Instead of providing a single numerical value, you could define the inflation rate as a list.
Using the new Inflation
variable in the definition for Gasprice
, the results show three different rates of increases in gasoline prices from 1990 to 1994:
Variable Gasprice :=
Dynamic(1.2, Gasprice[Time - 1]*(1 + Inflation)) →
See Also
Comments
Enable comment auto-refresher