MATLAB® is optimized for operations involving matrices and vectors. The process of revising loop-based, scalar-oriented code to use MATLAB matrix and vector operations is called vectorization. Vectorizing your code is worthwhile for several reasons:
Appearance: Vectorized mathematical code appears more like the mathematical expressions found in textbooks, making the code easier to understand.
Less Error Prone: Without loops, vectorized code is often shorter. Fewer lines of code mean fewer opportunities to introduce programming errors.
Performance: Vectorized code often runs much faster than the corresponding code containing loops.
This code computes the sine of 1,001 values ranging from 0 to 10:
i = 0;
for t = 0:.01:10
i = i + 1;
y(i) = sin(t);
endThis is a vectorized version of the same code:
t = 0:.01:10; y = sin(t);
The second code sample usually executes faster than the first
and is a more efficient use of MATLAB. Test execution speed on
your system by creating scripts that contain the code shown, and then
use the tic and toc functions
to measure their execution time.
This code computes the cumulative sum of a vector at every fifth element:
x = 1:10000;
ylength = (length(x) - mod(length(x),5))/5;
y(1:ylength) = 0;
for n= 5:5:length(x)
y(n/5) = sum(x(1:n));
end Using vectorization, you can write a much more concise MATLAB process. This code shows one way to accomplish the task:
x = 1:10000; xsums = cumsum(x); y = xsums(5:5:length(x));
Array operators perform the same operation for all elements in the data set. These
types of operations are useful for repetitive calculations. For example, suppose you
collect the volume (V) of various cones by recording their
diameter (D) and height (H). If you collect
the information for just one cone, you can calculate the volume for that single
cone:
V = 1/12*pi*(D^2)*H;
Now, collect information on 10,000 cones. The vectors D and
H each contain 10,000 elements, and you want to calculate
10,000 volumes. In most programming languages, you need to set up a loop similar to
this MATLAB
code:
for n = 1:10000 V(n) = 1/12*pi*(D(n)^2)*H(n); end
With MATLAB, you can perform the calculation for each element of a vector with similar syntax as the scalar case:
% Vectorized Calculation
V = 1/12*pi*(D.^2).*H;Note
Placing a period (.) before the operators
*, /, and ^,
transforms them into array operators.
Array operators also enable you to combine matrices of different dimensions. This automatic expansion of size-1 dimensions is useful for vectorizing grid creation, matrix and vector operations, and more.
Suppose that matrix A represents test scores, the rows of which
denote different classes. You want to calculate the difference between the average
score and individual scores for each class. Using a loop, the operation looks
like:
A = [97 89 84; 95 82 92; 64 80 99;76 77 67;... 88 59 74; 78 66 87; 55 93 85]; mA = mean(A); B = zeros(size(A)); for n = 1:size(A,2) B(:,n) = A(:,n) - mA(n); end
A more direct way to do this is with A - mean(A), which avoids
the need of a loop and is significantly faster.
devA = A - mean(A)
devA =
18 11 0
16 4 8
-15 2 15
-3 -1 -17
9 -19 -10
-1 -12 3
-24 15 1Even though A is a 7-by-3 matrix and mean(A)
is a 1-by-3 vector, MATLAB implicitly expands the vector as if it had the same size as the
matrix, and the operation executes as a normal element-wise minus operation.
The size requirement for the operands is that for each dimension, the arrays must either have the same size or one of them is 1. If this requirement is met, then dimensions where one of the arrays has size 1 are expanded to be the same size as the corresponding dimension in the other array. For more information, see Compatible Array Sizes for Basic Operations.
Another area where implicit expansion is useful for vectorization is if you are
working with multidimensional data. Suppose you want to evaluate a function,
F, of two variables, x and
y.
F(x,y) = x*exp(-x2 -
y2)
To evaluate this function at every combination of points in the
x and y vectors, you need to define a grid
of values. For this task you should avoid using loops to iterate through the point
combinations. Instead, if one of the vectors is a column and the other is a row,
then MATLAB automatically constructs the grid when the vectors are used with an
array operator, such as x+y or x-y. In this
example, x is a 21-by-1 vector and y is a
1-by-16 vector, so the operation produces a 21-by-16 matrix by expanding the second
dimension of x and the first dimension of
y.
x = (-2:0.2:2)'; % 21-by-1 y = -1.5:0.2:1.5; % 1-by-16 F = x.*exp(-x.^2-y.^2); % 21-by-16
In cases where you want to explicitly create the grids, you can use the meshgrid and ndgrid functions.
A logical extension of the bulk processing of arrays is to vectorize comparisons and decision making. MATLAB comparison operators accept vector inputs and return vector outputs.
For example, suppose while collecting data from 10,000 cones,
you record several negative values for the diameter. You can determine
which values in a vector are valid with the >= operator:
D = [-0.2 1.0 1.5 3.0 -1.0 4.2 3.14]; D >= 0
ans =
0 1 1 1 0 1 1Vgood, for which the corresponding
elements of D are nonnegative:Vgood = V(D >= 0);
MATLAB allows you to perform a logical AND or OR on the
elements of an entire vector with the functions all and any,
respectively. You can throw a warning if all values of D are
below zero:
if all(D < 0) warning('All values of diameter are negative.') return end
MATLAB can also compare two vectors with compatible sizes, allowing you to
impose further restrictions. This code finds all the values where V is nonnegative
and D is greater than
H:
V((V >= 0) & (D > H))
To aid comparison, MATLAB contains special values to denote overflow, underflow, and undefined
operators, such as Inf and NaN. Logical
operators isinf and isnan exist to help
perform logical tests for these special values. For example, it is often useful to
exclude NaN values from
computations:
x = [2 -1 0 3 NaN 2 NaN 11 4 Inf]; xvalid = x(~isnan(x))
xvalid =
2 -1 0 3 2 11 4 InfNote
Inf == Inf returns true; however, NaN
== NaN always returns false.
When vectorizing code, you often need to construct a matrix with a particular size or structure. Techniques exist for creating uniform matrices. For instance, you might need a 5-by-5 matrix of equal elements:
A = ones(5,5)*10;
v = 1:5; A = repmat(v,3,1)
A =
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4 5 The function repmat possesses flexibility in building
matrices from smaller matrices or vectors. repmat creates
matrices by repeating an input matrix:
A = repmat(1:3,5,2) B = repmat([1 2; 3 4],2,2)
A =
1 2 3 1 2 3
1 2 3 1 2 3
1 2 3 1 2 3
1 2 3 1 2 3
1 2 3 1 2 3
B =
1 2 1 2
3 4 3 4
1 2 1 2
3 4 3 4In many applications, calculations done on an element of a vector
depend on other elements in the same vector. For example, a vector, x,
might represent a set. How to iterate through a set without a for or while loop
is not obvious. The process becomes much clearer and the syntax less
cumbersome when you use vectorized code.
A number of different ways exist for finding the redundant elements
of a vector. One way involves the function diff.
After sorting the vector elements, equal adjacent elements produce
a zero entry when you use the diff function on
that vector. Because diff(x) produces a vector
that has one fewer element than x, you must add
an element that is not equal to any other element in the set. NaN always
satisfies this condition. Finally, you can use logical indexing to
choose the unique elements in the set:
x = [2 1 2 2 3 1 3 2 1 3]; x = sort(x); difference = diff([x,NaN]); y = x(difference~=0)
y =
1 2 3unique function:y=unique(x);
unique function might provide more functionality
than is needed and slow down the execution of your code. Use the tic and toc functions
if you want to measure the performance of each code snippet.Rather than merely returning the set, or subset, of x,
you can count the occurrences of an element in a vector. After the
vector sorts, you can use the find function to
determine the indices of zero values in diff(x) and
to show where the elements change value. The difference between subsequent
indices from the find function indicates the
number of occurrences for a particular element:
x = [2 1 2 2 3 1 3 2 1 3]; x = sort(x); difference = diff([x,max(x)+1]); count = diff(find([1,difference])) y = x(find(difference))
count =
3 4 3
y =
1 2 3
find function does not return
indices for NaN elements. You can count the number
of NaN and Inf values using
the isnan and isinf functions.count_nans = sum(isnan(x(:))); count_infs = sum(isinf(x(:)));
| Function | Description |
|---|---|
all | Determine if all array elements are nonzero or true |
any | Determine if any array elements are nonzero |
cumsum | Cumulative sum |
diff | Differences and Approximate Derivatives |
find | Find indices and values of nonzero elements |
ind2sub | Subscripts from linear index |
ipermute | Inverse permute dimensions of N-D array |
logical | Convert numeric values to logicals |
meshgrid | Rectangular grid in 2-D and 3-D space |
ndgrid | Rectangular grid in N-D space |
permute | Rearrange dimensions of N-D array |
prod | Product of array elements |
repmat | Repeat copies of array |
reshape | Reshape array |
shiftdim | Shift dimensions |
sort | Sort array elements |
squeeze | Remove singleton dimensions |
sub2ind | Convert subscripts to linear indices |
sum | Sum of array elements |