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Matlab — 2016 Work

C = bsxfun(@minus, A, B);

The biggest UI pain point in 2016? While powerful, it felt slow. Switching between "Editor" and "View" tabs had a slight lag that modern versions have eliminated. Also, Live Scripts ( *.mlx ) existed in 2016a, but they were buggy. Most professionals stuck to the plain .m editor until 2018. The "Great Plot" of 2016 If you do data visualization, 2016 is a solid workhorse. It has the tiledlayout ? No. That came later. In 2016, you were still using subplot , which works fine but lacks the tight, borderless control we have today. matlab 2016

C = A - B; If you are maintaining legacy code, spotting bsxfun is the immediate tell that the script was written before the 2016b paradigm shift. This single update simplified code readability immensely. Visually, 2016 looks like a "Modern Classic." It was the immediate successor to the 2014 ribbon-style layout. You have the Current Folder, Workspace, and Command Window docked in a dark gray theme (no dark mode, unfortunately—that’s a 2023 feature). C = bsxfun(@minus, A, B); The biggest UI

Recently, I had to dust off an old license and spin up to support a piece of lab equipment that hasn't seen a driver update since the Obama administration. The experience was a surprisingly pleasant trip down memory lane. Also, Live Scripts ( *