mis match matrix dimension
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Life is Wonderful
on 28 Mar 2023
Commented: Life is Wonderful
on 29 Mar 2023
Hi
Consider the example and propose a solution to the dimension mismatch.
Thank you very much
a = zeros(15,41);
b = ones(1,2);
for i = 1:length(a)
a(:,i) = b;
end
6 Comments
Dyuman Joshi
on 28 Mar 2023
Edited: Dyuman Joshi
on 28 Mar 2023
"The issue is that after the third iteration, the b matrix is surpassed."
Can you explain what do you mean this?
"How to transform a matrix 1 x 2 to a 15 x 41 ?"
Since the dimensions of b are not multiple of the dimensions of a, it is not possible to transform (or replicate in any manner) b into a. Though you can replicate to nearest dimension and crop the required size.
a = zeros(15,41);
b = [1 2];
What is the expected output for the above data?
Accepted Answer
Bjorn Gustavsson
on 28 Mar 2023
As the commenters have indicated your request is to non-specific to have one solution, while we all expect you to have one specific solution in mind. Therefore it is unlikely that the solutions we suggest will be the one you have in mind. You could do something like this:
a = zeros(15,41);
b = ones(1,2);
for i = 1:size(a,2) % It is better to use the size of a in the dimension you use it for, this makes the code robus and will work even in the case a is larger along the first dimension
a(:,i) = b(1+rem(i,2)); % This will copy the elements in b into a i some order, probably not the one you have in mind, but perhaps?
end
You could also do something like:
a = zeros(15,41);
b = ones(1,2);
for i2 = 1:2:size(a,2), % another programming trick is to name the loop-variables to indicate their meaning, here i2 - since we're looping over the second dimension of a
a(:,i2:(i2+1)) = repmat(b,size(a,1),1);
end
Since both elements of b are identical you could do something like this:
a(:) = b(1); % this will work for this specific case, but not when b(2) ~= b(1)
Your question indicate that you are very new to matlab-use. To get up to speed as efficiently and rapidly as possible I've come to understand that the on-ramp course/material is good - that is the Mathworks introduction to matlab and designed for this purpose.
HTH
1 Comment
More Answers (1)
Nithin Kumar
on 28 Mar 2023
Edited: Nithin Kumar
on 28 Mar 2023
Hi,
I understand that you are trying to assign matrix "b" to matrix "a" where the order of matrices are not the same. You can apply assignment operation on matrices when they are of the same order.
Additionally, you can apply assignment operation on matrices if at least one of the two dimensions of both the matrices are equal using concatenation.
For more information on the matrix dimensions, kindly refer the following link Creating, Concatenating, and Expanding Matrices - MATLAB & Simulink - MathWorks India
I hope this answer resolves the issue you are encountering.
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