double indexing

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Frank
Frank on 12 Jan 2012
Commented: Petter on 11 Jul 2023
Hello,
is it possible to do double or multiple indexing in matlab? E.g.
>> v = [1,2,5,7,9]
v =
1 2 5 7 9
>> v(1:4)
ans =
1 2 5 7
>> v(1:4)(2:3)
ans =
2 5
The first index create a new vector and the second index creates a new vector out of the newly created one. It is common in other languages, and it helps to avoid defining temp variables.
Cheers, Frank

Accepted Answer

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 12 Jan 2012
The closest you can get is
subsref(V(1:4), struct('type', '()', 'subs', 2:3)))
You can follow {} referencing by () referencing, {}(), but you cannot use ()() or (){} or ().{} or ().(), and you cannot use function(){} or function()() or function().field
  2 Comments
Frank
Frank on 12 Jan 2012
thanks. Then I prefer to use a temp var instead. :)
Petter
Petter on 11 Jul 2023
"You can follow {} referencing by () referencing, {}()"
This one line made my day so much easier, greatly appreciated. Thumbs up, gold star.

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More Answers (2)

mklcst mklcst
mklcst mklcst on 23 Jan 2014
I think it could be very useful to have a short way to perform double indexing.

Jos (10584)
Jos (10584) on 23 Jan 2014
If the indices are stored in variables, this is trivial!
V = [1,2,5,7,9]
ii = 1:4
jj = [2 3]
out = V(ii(jj))
  1 Comment
lee eugene
lee eugene on 2 Aug 2019
However, if the two index do not have the same starting indexing, there would be something wrong. For example, i would like to select index [2,4] from [1,2,5,7,9] at first, and then select index [1,2]. Then it would be [2,5,7] at first and [2,5] in the end.

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