Basic question: how to find range of index values

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I want to find the location (range of N index values) over which a variable (mydata) holds a specific value (X)
The variable (mydata) contains many occurrences of X before the occurrence of a plateau - where the value of X is constant for N data points.
ELABORATION:
My problem is a little more complex.
mydata = [1 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 45 67 8 9 4 4 4 4 4 1 36 2 4 4 4 3 1 1 18 98 99]
I want to find the index values for the 7 (N) consecutive occurrences of '4'. I do not want to find the other occurrences of '4' i.e. one occurrence before the sequence of 7 and later one occurrence of a sequence of 5.

Accepted Answer

Etienne O'Brien
Etienne O'Brien on 13 Jun 2011
Thank you everyone.
Matt's solution worked for me
S = findstr(mydata,4*ones(1,3));
However, my computer is making heavy weather of this calculation. It's taking several seconds to return the answer as it returns the starting values of sub-occurrences. Unfortunately I realise now that I don't know the precise length of the sequence. For example it could be 1100 or 1500 data points long but I do know that there will be at least 1000. Is it possible to adapt Matt's function to return the first occurrence only?
Thank you.
  4 Comments
Andrew Newell
Andrew Newell on 14 Jun 2011
Etienne, I hope that you selected your own answer by mistake. Matt's was clearly the correct choice.

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More Answers (6)

Matt Fig
Matt Fig on 13 Jun 2011
mydata = [1 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 45 67 8 9 4 4 4 4 4 1 36 2 4 4 4 3 1 1 18 98 99];
findstr(mydata,4*ones(1,7))
This finds the starting index of a sequence of 7 4s in a row. Change the 4 to a 5 to find a sequence of 7 5s in a row. Change the 7 to a 3 to find a sequence of 3 4s in a row, etc.
Note that the above will return the starting indices of all occurrences of, say, 3 4s in a row - even where those occurrences are sub-occurrences. To limit the search to only those occurrences which are exactly the length desired, simply make one more call to the function:
S = findstr(mydata,4*ones(1,3));
S = S(findstr([0 diff(S)==1 0],[0 0]))

Laura Proctor
Laura Proctor on 13 Jun 2011
If you wish to find the corresponding index values where your variable mydata is equal to X, then you can use the find command like this:
iVals = find(mydata==X);

Chirag Gupta
Chirag Gupta on 13 Jun 2011
I am not exactly clear about the question, but may be this is a starting point:
mydata = [1 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 1 45 67 8 9 1 36 2 3 1 1 18 98 99];
c = find(mydata==1)
You would probably to refine the condition inside the find, especially if your are dealing with doubles

Laura Proctor
Laura Proctor on 13 Jun 2011
The following will find the maximum run and return the index values in that run to a variable named reqVals.
I'm sure there's a tidier way to do this, but off the top of my head:
mydata = [1 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 45 67 8 9 4 4 4 4 4 1 36 2 4 4 4 3 1 1 18 98 99];
iVals = find(mydata==4);
sVals = iVals([true diff(iVals)~=1]);
eVals = iVals([diff(iVals)~=1 true]);
lVals = eVals - sVals + 1;
[num idx] = max(lVals)
reqVals = sVals(idx):eVals(idx)

Andrei Bobrov
Andrei Bobrov on 13 Jun 2011
md = mydata==4;
vf = find([true diff(md)~=0]);
idx = [vf; vf(2:end)-1 length(md)];
indexsevenfour = idx(:,diff(idx)+1== 7)';
MORE variant
idx = bsxfun(@plus,1:7,(1:length(mydata)-7)'-1);
idx(all(bsxfun(@eq,mydata(idx),4*ones(1,7)),2))

Etienne O'Brien
Etienne O'Brien on 13 Jun 2011
Thanks Laura and Andrei,
I've followed up Andrei's as it is the shorter.
I'm sorry, I'm a little lost though - I'm almost a complete beginner.
(1) I get this error message: ??? Error using ==> horzcat CAT arguments dimensions are not consistent.
(2) Could you correct me, if I'm wrong here in my interpretation.
md = mydata==4; % This finds the index values of all occurrences of '4' in the data set
vf = find([true diff(md)~=0]); % What does this do?
idx = [vf; vf(2:end)-1 length(md)]; % What does this do?
indexsevenfour = idx(:,diff(idx)+1== 7)'; % Does this provide the index values for the seven consecutive values of '4'
Thank you.
  2 Comments
Laura Proctor
Laura Proctor on 13 Jun 2011
I would go with Matt's response if you want to find sequence of (7) 4's in a row as that is the simplest way to find the index value of the starting point.
The other methods use logical indexing, which assign values of 1 for true and 0 for false.

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