Creating an array of partial sums of certain array

12 views (last 30 days)
Suppose I have an initial array [a1 a2 a3 a4 a5]. Then I have to create an array = [a1, a2, a3, a4, a5, a1+a2, a2+a3, a3+a4, a4+a5, a1+a2+a3, a2+a3+a4, a3+a4+a5, a1+a2+a3+a4, a2+a3+a4+a5, a1+a2+a3+a4+a5]. Array has total 5*(5+1)/2 =15 elements. How to do it?
I need to extend it to any finite (say n) no. of elements in the initial array so that the resulting array has n(n+1)/2 elements.
Thank you.

Accepted Answer

Dyuman Joshi
Dyuman Joshi on 20 Feb 2023
Here is an approach, however I am not sure how fast this will be for a large n
y=[1 2 3 4 5 6];
n=numel(y);
z=cell(1,n);
for k=1:n
z{k}=movsum(y,k,'Endpoints','discard');
end
out=[z{:}]
out = 1×21
1 2 3 4 5 6 3 5 7 9 11 6 9 12 15 10 14 18 15 20 21

More Answers (1)

John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 20 Feb 2023
Edited: John D'Errico on 20 Feb 2023
For example, consider the vector (I've used syms here, so you can see that it works, and generate the correct terms. Had a been any numeric vector, it would work as well.)
n = 5;
syms a [1,n]
a
a = 
Now what happens when you multiply that vector by an array, of the form
diag(a)*tril(ones(n))
ans = 
Does that look somewhat like what you anted? Not exactly, I know. But, is it close?
So then, what would cumsum do?
cumsum(diag(a)*tril(ones(n)))
ans = 
So the list of terms that you are looking to find are in the lower half of that matrix. Can you extract them trivially? Again, we can use find and tril. Putting it all together now, we have
ind = find(tril(ones(n)));
A = cumsum(diag(a)*tril(ones(n)));
A = A(ind)
A = 
How many terms are in that result?
numel(A)
ans = 15
So now try it out.
a = 1:7; % we expect to see 28 total terms in the result.
n = numel(a);
ind = tril(ones(n)) == 1;
A = cumsum(diag(a)*tril(ones(n)));
A = A(ind)
A = 28×1
1 3 6 10 15 21 28 2 5 9
numel(A)
ans = 28
  3 Comments
John D'Errico
John D'Errico on 20 Feb 2023
Edited: John D'Errico on 20 Feb 2023
Yes. find was not necessary there. I am not at all sure what size arrays are involved. We were never told that information.

Sign in to comment.

Categories

Find more on Matrices and Arrays 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!