Why does this technique not work?
1 visualización (últimos 30 días)
Mostrar comentarios más antiguos
Sadiq Akbar
el 1 de Ag. de 2024
Comentada: Torsten
el 2 de Ag. de 2024
I have a mat file which has a row vector u and a matrix temp_gbo. The size of this matrix is 100 x 4. I want the following:
Each row of the matrix temp_gbo must have the same arrangment of elements as is in u.The mat file and the script "swapping" are attached but the script doesn't fulfill my requirement. How should I modify this code?
clear;clc
load 2F_and_1J_Noise0
temp_gbo
u
% Create an index mapping based on the ordering in u
[~, idx] = sort(u)
% Rearrange each row of temp_gbo to match the order in u
sorted_temp_gbo = arrayfun(@(i) temp_gbo(i, idx), 1:size(temp_gbo, 1), 'UniformOutput', false);
% Convert cell array back to matrix
sorted_temp_gbo = cell2mat(sorted_temp_gbo');
% Display results
disp('Rearranged temp_gbo:');
disp(sorted_temp_gbo);
0 comentarios
Respuesta aceptada
Torsten
el 1 de Ag. de 2024
Editada: Torsten
el 1 de Ag. de 2024
I already gave you the code how to order a vector according to the ordering of "u". Why don't you use it ?
Your method is wrong. You get the order of the elements of u from the command
[~, idx] = sort(u)
as
[4 1 2 3]
Now if you order the elements of temp_gbo according to temp_gbo(i,idx), you put the element in column 4 in column 1, the element of column 1 in column 2, the element of column 2 in column 3 and the element of column 3 in column 4. But why should this reflect the ordering of u ? You don't use the ordering of the ith row of temp_gbo in any way.
6 comentarios
Torsten
el 2 de Ag. de 2024
Editada: Torsten
el 2 de Ag. de 2024
So can you modify my "arrafun" so that it does the same as does yours.
I don't use "arrayfun", I use a loop. And I don't think that "arrayfun" is applicable in this corrected version of your code for the reason already mentionned.
load 2F_and_1J_Noise0;
u
temp_gbo
[~, iu] = sort(u);
sorted_temp_gbo = zeros(size(temp_gbo));
for i = 1:size(temp_gbo, 1)
[~,itemp(iu)] = sort(temp_gbo(i,:));
sorted_temp_gbo(i,:) = temp_gbo(i,itemp);
end
sorted_temp_gbo
Más respuestas (2)
Abhas
el 1 de Ag. de 2024
Hi Sadiq,
To achieve the specified order based on the relative magnitudes within each row of "temp_gbo", you need to sort each row and then rearrange the elements according to the specified positions.
Here's the MATLAB code to perform the required steps:
clear; clc;
load 2F_and_1J_Noise0;
% Define the new order based on the relative magnitudes
new_order = [2, 3, 4, 1]; % 2nd lowest, 3rd lowest, 4th lowest, lowest
% Preallocate the sorted matrix
sorted_temp_gbo = zeros(size(temp_gbo));
% Rearrange each row of temp_gbo to match the specified order
for i = 1:size(temp_gbo, 1)
[~, sort_idx] = sort(temp_gbo(i, :)); % Get the indices of the sorted elements
sorted_temp_gbo(i, :) = temp_gbo(i, sort_idx(new_order)); % Rearrange according to new_order
end
% Display results
disp('Rearranged temp_gbo:');
disp(sorted_temp_gbo);
Output:
You may refer to the following MathWorks documentation link to have a better understanding on array indexing: https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/math/matrix-indexing.html
4 comentarios
Abhas
el 1 de Ag. de 2024
- Determine the new positions of each element in u after sorting, and use this order to rearrange the elements in each row of temp_gbo.
- The command you used only provides the order of the elements in u, but it does not specify how to rearrange the elements in temp_gbo accordingly. In my code it specifies the order in which the smallest, second smallest, third smallest and largest element should be placed at.
Steven Lord
el 1 de Ag. de 2024
Setup
Let's generate a collection of possible rows.
u = randi(10, 6, 3);
Let's ensure that no row in u has the exact same values as another row, though perhaps in a different order.
s = sort(u, 2);
while height(unique(s, 'rows')) < height(u)
u = randi(10, 6, 3);
s = sort(u, 2);
end
u
Now create the matrix and reorder each row in A arbitrarily.
whichrow = randi(height(u), 8, 1);
A = u(whichrow, :);
for therow = 1:height(A)
A(therow, :) = A(therow, randperm(width(A)));
end
A
The algorithm
We can use ismember (or you may want to use ismembertol if your data is not integer valued) to determine which row in u was used to generate each shuffled row in A. First we sort the rows in u and A then we ask whether each row in Asorted is present in s (we know that it is, so I can ignore that output) and which row of s the corresponding row of Asorted is.
s = sort(u, 2);
Asorted = sort(A, 2);
[~, ind] = ismember(Asorted, s, 'rows');
Trust but verify
To check, does this match the contents of whichrow, which is the variable we used to construct A in the first place?
[ind, whichrow]
Looks good to me.
2 comentarios
Torsten
el 2 de Ag. de 2024
Since i remember the previous question @Sadiq Akbar asked, his aim is to find code for the following problem:
Given two vectors u and v of length n, find the ordered vector v_ordered of length n such that if u(i) is the j-th biggest element of u, then v_ordered(i) is the j-th biggest element of v for 1 <= i <= n.
Ver también
Categorías
Más información sobre Matrix Indexing en Help Center y File Exchange.
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!