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`.`

operator for noncommutative or dot product multiplication

 

Calling Sequence

Parameters

Description

Thread Safety

Examples

Calling Sequence

A . B

Parameters

A, B

-

anything

Description

• 

The '.' operator performs noncommutative or dot product multiplication on its arguments.

  

If A and B are numbers (including complex and extended numerics such as infinity and undefined), then A . B = A*B.

  

If A and B are Vectors with the same orientation (i.e., both are row Vectors or both are column Vectors), then A . B is computed by using LinearAlgebra[DotProduct].

  

If one of A and B is a Matrix or a Vector, and the other is a Matrix, Vector or constant and the previous case does not apply, then their product is computed by using LinearAlgebra[Multiply].  See also simplify/rtable.  

  

If A and B are Arrays, their product is computed as component-wise multiplication using zip.  If A and B do not have the same dimensions, extra entries are ignored.

  

Arguments that are not of type Matrix, Vector, constant, or Array are ignored, and A . B remains unevaluated.

• 

Calls to '.' such as A . B . C call `.`(A, B, C).

  

In this case, the process is repeated on the (transformed) arguments until no such argument pairs remain.

• 

The dot operator is left-associative.

• 

Note:  In Maple,  '.' can be interpreted as a decimal point (for example, 3.7), as part of a range operator (for example, x..y), or as the (noncommutative) multiplication operator.  To distinguish between these three circumstances, Maple uses the following rule.

  

Any dot that is not part of a range operator (more than one '.' in a row) and not part of a number is interpreted as the noncommutative multiplication operator.

  

Note that the interpretation of the phrase "not part of a number" depends on whether you are using 1-D or 2-D input mode.  In 1-D input mode, interpretation proceeds from left to right, and a dot following a number will be interpreted as a decimal point unless that number already contains a decimal point.  In 2-D input mode, interpretation is carried out on the expression as a whole, and because spaces and juxtaposition can be interpreted as multiplication, a dot which is immediately preceded or followed by a number is always interpreted as a decimal point.

  

For example, in 1-D input mode, 3.4 is a number, 3. 4 is an error and 3 .4 and 3 . 4 return 12.  3. .4 is 12. and 3..4 is a range.

  

In 2-D input mode, 3.4 is a number, 3. 4 and 3 .4 are errors and 3 . 4 returns 12.  3. .4 is an error and 3..4 is again a range.  (All of the errors shown by these examples are due to the rule that a number cannot appear as the right-hand operand of an implicit multiplication operation. In such cases, use of explicit multiplication ( * ) can avoid the error.  See also 2-D Math Details for more information.)

Thread Safety

• 

The `.` operator is thread-safe as of Maple 15.

• 

For more information on thread safety, see index/threadsafe.

Examples

withLinearAlgebra:

AScalarMatrix3,3

A300030003

(1)

B1,0,2|0,1,2|0,0,2

B100010222

(2)

V1,2,5

V−12−5

(3)

A·B·V

−36−24

(4)

V·V

30

(5)

B·V·V

30000300606060

(6)

B·V·V

45

(7)

4·V

−48−20

(8)

λ·A·B

λ·300030666

(9)

a·b

a·b

(10)

7·6

42

(11)

Array1Array1,2,3,4,5,6

Array1123456

(12)

Array2Array1,1,1,2,2,2,3,3,3

Array2111222333

(13)

Array3Array1,2,3,1,2,3,1,2,3

Array3123123123

(14)

If the dimensions of the Arrays are not the same, extra entries are ignored by the dot operator.

Array1·Array2

12381012

(15)

Array2·Array3

123246369

(16)

See Also

2-D Math Details

infinity

LinearAlgebra Shortcuts

LinearAlgebra[DotProduct]

LinearAlgebra[Multiply]

Matrix

simplify/rtable

type/dot

undefined

Vector