View Single Post
  #14   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 23-02-2005, 03:47
Nikhil Bajaj Nikhil Bajaj is offline
MATLAB Fan
FRC #0461 (Westside Boiler Invasion)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Rookie Year: 2002
Location: West Lafayette, Indiana
Posts: 101
Nikhil Bajaj has a reputation beyond reputeNikhil Bajaj has a reputation beyond reputeNikhil Bajaj has a reputation beyond reputeNikhil Bajaj has a reputation beyond reputeNikhil Bajaj has a reputation beyond reputeNikhil Bajaj has a reputation beyond reputeNikhil Bajaj has a reputation beyond reputeNikhil Bajaj has a reputation beyond reputeNikhil Bajaj has a reputation beyond reputeNikhil Bajaj has a reputation beyond reputeNikhil Bajaj has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via AIM to Nikhil Bajaj
Re: Excel vs. Matlab

Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe Ross
RIT just switched the mechanical engineering curriculum from teaching Excel with VBA to Matlab.

I'm proficient in both, and I choose excel for easy, short things (less then a few hours of work) and matlab for more complicated number crunching or programming.
At Purdue last semester we used both in ENGR 116, which is the Honors Engineering Computer Problem Solving Tools thing class (I really don't remember the actual name) but I found that they were both extremely useful. In practice, we used excel to do some pretty sophisticated modelling of arm torque, which could have just as easily been done in MATLAB. Our drive calculations (insert shameless plug here for you to go look at our drivetrain pic for this year) were done in Excel, mainly, to combine motors and stuff, but I'm currently working on a Matlab script that will be handy for gearbox construction.

I think they're both darn awesome.