Transposing matrix using reshape

5 views (last 30 days)
Adam
Adam on 21 Mar 2012
Hello,
I am a student taking a class to learn matlab. For a project, our instructor is requiring us to transpose a function using the reshape command. Because of the way matlab reads matrixes, column-dominant, this is proving very difficult.
In essence, I need to perform the following using only reshape:
A = A'
or
A = [1,2,3;4,5,6] must become A = [1,4;2,5;3,6]
Thanks for your help.
  10 Comments
Geoff
Geoff on 21 Mar 2012
Seems to me like your instructor is teaching you to hate MatLab.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 21 Mar 2012
Is array indexing allowed? Are multiplication and addition allowed?

Sign in to comment.

Answers (5)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 21 Mar 2012
reshape() by itself cannot be used to transpose a matrix unless the matrix happens to be a vector. If the matrix is not a vector then transpose alters the internal storage order of the elements, whereas reshape() never does.
For example, internally [1 2; 3 4] is stored in the order 1 3 2 4, and transpose of [1 2;3 4] would be [1 3;2 4] which would be stored in the order 1 2 3 4. You can see that the 2 and 3 have swapped internal places in the transpose. Reshape never swaps internal orderings.

James Tursa
James Tursa on 21 Mar 2012
This is an ill-posed problem or something is missing from the problem statement. There are various ways to accomplish a transpose via indexing or permute etc as has already been pointed out. None of these involve the reshape function and as Walter points out reshape never alters the internal memory order (which is required for a general matrix transpose) so how the heck is reshape supposed to be involved in this in the first place?

Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 21 Mar 2012
Are you sure he didn't mean permute?
permute(A, [2 1])
ans =
1 4
2 5
3 6
  1 Comment
Adam
Adam on 21 Mar 2012
I'm sorry, but no. She explicitly said reshape. Thanks for trying to help, though.

Sign in to comment.


Geoff
Geoff on 21 Mar 2012
Okay, got a solution. Your matrix (let's just use the example of A) can be indexed by the vector 1:6, but you need to translate this index to be row-wise instead of column-wise.
I = 1:size(A(:),1)
So first, work out how to generate your row and column indices so that you end up with something like:
r = [1 1 1 2 2 2]
c = [1 2 3 1 2 3]
Then use those to generate a transposed index for A, which will end up like this:
It = [1 3 5 2 4 6]
After you have that, it should be obvious what to do.

Jan
Jan on 21 Mar 2012
As long as the problem is ill-posed, weird solutions are valid:
B = feval(reshape(['tno'; 'rss'; 'ape'], 1, 9), A);
  1 Comment
Jan
Jan on 21 Mar 2012
The similarities between ...rssape and reshape are magic.

Sign in to comment.

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!