Most efficient way to sum anti-diagonal elements
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Jon Paul Janet
on 10 Jul 2016
Commented: Hongbo Zhao
on 10 Oct 2018
Inside an ODE that I am solving (ode15s), I need to do the following. Let the state vector by y (Nx1), and for some fixed, sparse symmetric A (NxN), I need to have that
y' = [sum of anti-diagonal elements of (diag(y)*A*diag(y))] + f(t)
for some forcing f. The problem is, for large N (10k + ) this is pretty slow as the solver takes many steps. Currently I have calculated a logical index mask (outside the ode) that gives me the elements I want, and my code (inside the d.e.) is:
A = spdiags(y,0,N,N)*A*spdiags(y,0,N,N); %overwrite A in-place with y*A*y
working_matrix=sparse([],[],[],2*N-1,N,N*ceil(N/2)); % sparse allocation
working_matrix(index_map)=A; %strip antidiagonals to columns
this gives me working_matrix, which has the antidiagonal elements of (diag(y)*A*diag(y) which I can just sum over. However, 99% of my runtime is spent on the line "working_matrix(index_map)=A". Any speedup on this line would save me a lot of time. "index_map" is a (2*N-1)xN logical array that pulls out the correct elements, based on this work here.
Is there a better way? I can pull of the antidiagonal elements of A outside the solver and pass the matrix that has the antidiagonal elements as rows, but then I still need the same construction applied to y*y' to get the matching elements of y - unless there is a better way to do this?
I am running R2015b if that matters.
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Accepted Answer
Andrei Bobrov
on 12 Jul 2016
"all of the elements on any NE-SW diagonal"
a = randi(50,6);
[m,n] = size(a);
idx = hankel(1:m,m:(n-1)+m);
out = accumarray(idx(:),a(:));
4 Comments
More Answers (3)
Walter Roberson
on 11 Jul 2016
[r, c] = size(A);
sum(A(r : r-1 : end))
2 Comments
Stephen23
on 12 Jul 2016
Edited: Stephen23
on 12 Jul 2016
+1 for a very neat solution. Note the indices must end with end-1:
>> X = [1,2,3;4,5,6;7,8,9]
X =
1 2 3
4 5 6
7 8 9
>> [r,c] = size(X);
>> X(r:r-1:end-1)
ans =
7 5 3
>> X(r:r-1:end)
ans =
7 5 3 9
The code should be:
>> sum(X(r:r-1:end-1))
ans = 15
Also note that this will only work for square matrices (and a few other cases) but not for any general rectangular matrix.
Walter Roberson
on 12 Jul 2016
For non-square matrices,
sum( X(r:r-1:r*(r-1)+1) )
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