Optimization Toolbox™ solvers accept vectors for many arguments, such as the initial point
x0
, lower bounds lb
, and upper bounds
ub
. They also accept matrices for these arguments, where matrix
means an array of any size. When your solver arguments are naturally arrays, not
vectors, feel free to provide the arguments as arrays.
Here is how solvers handle matrix arguments.
Internally, solvers convert matrix arguments into vectors before processing.
For example, x0
becomes x0(:)
. For an
explanation of this syntax, see the A(:)
entry in colon
, or the "Indexing with a
Single Index" section of Array Indexing.
For output, solvers reshape the solution x
to
the same size as the input x0
.
When x0
is a matrix, solvers pass x
as
a matrix of the same size as x0
to both the objective
function and to any nonlinear constraint function.
Linear Constraints, though, take x
in
vector form, x(:)
. In other words, a linear constraint of the
form
A*x ≤ b
or Aeq*x =
beq
takes x
as a vector, not a matrix. Ensure that your matrix
A
or Aeq
has the same number of
columns as x0
has elements, or the solver will error.