Two-argument form See also one-argument form Matrix inversion
The right and left-hand arguments are conformable simple numeric matrices (arrays of rank 2). Vectors are treated as one column matrices and scalars are treated as matrices of shape 1 1. The result is a matrix which, if matrix- multiplied by the right-hand argument, would yield the left-hand argument.
X 1 2 3 6 9 10 Y 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 X Ž Y 1 2 2 4 6 4
This last operation is the same as
( Ž Y ) +.× X
which is another way of defining the operation.
An important use for matrix divide is to give the least squares solution to the set of simultaneous linear equations:
B = A +.× X for a matrix A and vector B, or columns of matrix B
The solution is:
B Ž A
If the matrix division does not have a solution, DOMAIN ERROR will be reported. Note that matrix division is subject to accuracy limitations imposed by the representation of floating-point numbers and the algorithm used to calculate the result.