If you want to use a function several times it is convenient to define it as a so-called inline function:
f1 = inline('sin(x)*x','x')
defines the function f1(x)=sin(x)*x. Note that the arguments of 
inline must be strings (not symbolic expressions). You can 
then use the function f1 in expressions you type in.
You can also define inline functions of several variables:
g1 = inline('x*y+sin(x)','x','y')
defines the function g1(x,y)=x*y+sin(x) of two variables.
First download the file dirfield.m 
and put it in the same directory as your other m-files for the homework.
Define an inline function g of 
two variables t, y corresponding to the right hand 
side of the differential equation y'(t) = 
g(t,y(t)). E.g., for the differential 
equation y'(t) = t y2 define
g = inline('t*y^2','t','y')
You have to use 
inline(...,'t','y'), even if 
t or y does not occur in your formula.
To plot the direction field for t going from t0 to t1 with a 
spacing of dt and y going from y0 to y1 with a spacing of dy use 
dirfield(g,t0:dt:t1,y0:dy:y1). E.g., for 
t and y between -2 and 2 with a spacing of 0.2 
type
dirfield(g,-2:0.2:2,-2:0.2:2)
First define the inline function 
g corresponding to the 
right hand side of the differential equation y'(t) = 
g(t,y(t)). E.g., for the differential 
equation y'(t) = t y2 define
g = inline('t*y^2','t','y')
To plot the numerical solution of an initial value 
problem: For the initial condition y(t0)=y0 you can plot the 
solution for t going from t0 to t1 using 
ode45(g,[t0,t1],y0).
Example: To plot the solution of the initial value problem y'(t) = t y2, y(-2)=1 in the interval [-2,2] use
ode45(g,[-2,2],1)
The circles mark the values which were actually computed (the points are 
chosen by Matlab to optimize accuracy and efficiency). You can obtain vectors 
ts and ys with the coordinates of these points using 
[ts,ys] = ode45(g,[t0,t1],y0). You can then plot 
the solution using plot(ts,ys) (this is a way to 
obtain a plot without the circles).
To combine plots of the direction field and several 
solution curves use the commands hold 
on and hold off: After obtaining 
the first plot type hold on, then all subsequent commands plot in 
the same window. After the last plot command type hold off.
Example: Plot the direction field and the 13 solution curves with the initial conditions y(-2) = -0.4, -0.2, ..., 1.8, 2:
dirfield(g,-2:0.2:2,-2:0.2:2) hold on for y0=-0.4:0.2:2 [ts,ys] = ode45(g,[-2,2],y0); plot(ts,ys) end hold off
To obtain numerical values of the solution at certain t 
values: You can specify a vector tv of t values and 
use [ts,ys] = ode45(g,tv,y0). The first element of 
the vector tv is the initial t value; the vector tv 
must have at least 3 elements. E.g., to obtain the solution with the initial 
condition y(-2)=1 at t = -2, -1.5, ..., 1.5, 2 and display the results 
as a table with two columns, use
[ts,ys]=ode45(g,-2:0.5:2,1);
[ts,ys]
To obtain the numerical value of the solution at the final 
t-value use ys(end) . 
sol = dsolve('Dy=t*y^2','t')
The last argument 't' is the name of the independent variable. 
Do not type y(t) instead of y.
If Matlab can't find a solution it will return an empty symbol. If Matlab finds several solutions it returns a vector of solutions.
Sometimes Matlab can't find an explicit solution, but returns the solution in implicit form. E.g.,
dsolve('Dy=1/(y-exp(y))','t')returns
t-1/2*y^2+exp(y)+C1=0Unfortunately Matlab cannot handle initial conditions in this case. You can use
ezcontour('t-1/2*y^2+exp(y)',[-4 4 -3 3])to plot several solution curves for t in [-4,4], y in [-3,3]. You can useezplot('t-1/2*y^2+exp(y)-1',[-4 4 -3 3])to plot only the curve where t-1/2*y^2+exp(y)=1.
The solution will contain a constant C1. You can substitute 
values for the constant using 
subs(sol,'C1',value). E.g., to set C1 
to 5 and plot this solution for t=-2 to 2 use
ezplot( subs(sol,'C1',5) , [-2 2] )
To solve an initial value problem additionally specify an initial condition:
sol = dsolve('Dy=t*y^2','y(-2)=1','t')
To plot the solution use 
ezplot(sol,[t0,t1]). Here is an example for 
plotting the 13 solution curves with the initial conditions y(-2) = 
-0.4, -0.2, ..., 1.8, 2:
sol = dsolve('Dy=t*y^2','y(-2)=y0','t') for y0=-0.4:0.2:2 ezplot( subs(sol,'y0',y0) , [-2 2]) hold on end hold off axis tight
To obtain numerical values at one or more t 
values use subs(sol,'t',tval) and 
double (or vpa for 
more digits):
sol = dsolve('Dy=t*y^2','y(-2)=1','t')
This gives a numerical value of the solution at t=0.5:
double( subs(sol,'t',0.5) )
This computes numerical values of the solution at t=-2, -1.5, ..., 2 and displays the result as a table with two columns:
tval = (-2:0.5:2)'; % column vector with t-values
yval = double( subs(sol,'t',tval) )% column vector with y-values
[tval,yval] % display 2 columns together
(continued in Using Matlab for Higher Order ODEs and Systems of ODEs)
Tobias von Petersdorff