combinations of a matrix.....

1 view (last 30 days)
xplore29
xplore29 on 30 Mar 2013
I am trying to find an command/algorithm which gives me all possible translates of a given matrix that has fixed #a,#b, and #c. By translates I mean all those matrices which have the same #a,#b, and #c but different locations for these elements .
For example
M=[3 3 3;1 2 3;1 2 3]
the answer would be something like
M1=[1 2 3;1 2 3;3 3 3]
M2=[1 1 3;2 2 3;3 3 3]....
I dont know if its possible for matrices or not. Should I think of matrix as an array and try to find combinations for that array.
If there exists such an algorithm then kindly name it so that I can look into its theory
  3 Comments
xplore29
xplore29 on 30 Mar 2013
Its like you first find the numbers of times 1,2, and 3 in the given example and then find all those matrices which have the same number of 1s, 2s, and 3 . So the answer will be set of all matrices which are different.I didn't know whether i should be calling them permutations of a given matrix or what.
xplore29
xplore29 on 30 Mar 2013
So yes you may call it unique permutations of the same set of elements

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

Roger Stafford
Roger Stafford on 31 Mar 2013
If I understand you correctly, your problem is the same whether your M is a matrix or a single vector with the same total number of elements, so for convenience I will assume you really wish to fill a row vector with your three numbers in all possible combinations. If there are to be na, nb, and nc counts of the three quantities a, b, and c respectively, taken in all possible combinations, then the total number of these combinations would be (na+nb+nc)!/na!/nb!/nc!. Our task is therefore to generate a single matrix M with that many rows and na+nb+nc columns where each row is one of the possible combinations. (You should be cautious about how large you make these counts. The total number of combinations can be a surprisingly large number.)
We can do this with two calls on matlab's 'nchoosek' function, and we will take advantage of the fact that
(na+nb+nc)!/na!/nb!/nc! = (na+nb+nc)!/na!/(nb+nc)! * (nb+nc)!/nb!/nc!
which as you see is the product of two particular 'nchoosek' combination count numbers.
The following matlab code should accomplish this goal. (There is probably a more efficient way of generating this but I am too lazy at the moment to work it out.)
C1 = nchoosek(1:na+nb+nc,na); % Here are the two calls on 'nchoosek'
C2 = nchoosek(1:nb+nc,nb);
M = c*ones(size(C1,1)*size(C2,1),na+nb+nc); % First, fill M with all c's
k1 = 0;
for k2 = 1:size(C1,1)
p1 = C1(k2,:); % Use C1 to generate indices for inserting a's
q1 = 1:na+nb+nc;
q1(p1) = []; % These indices will point to b and c locations
for k3 = 1:size(C2,1)
p2 = C2(k3,:); % Use C2 to generate indices for inserting b's
k1 = k1 + 1; % Advance the row index of M
M(k1,p1) = a; % Insert na a's
M(k1,q1(p2)) = b; % and nb b's
end
end

More Answers (0)

Categories

Find more on Elementary Math in Help Center and File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!