Transposing 3 D matrix using permute - how does permute work?
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Ok. So I see how to transpose all the "2D slices" of a 3D matrix on other answers (permute(A, [2 1 3])).
But what does the order vector mean? The 2 means what? The second row, column? Anyone who can explain this, I appreciate it.
Thanks
2 comentarios
Andrew Newell
el 24 de En. de 2012
Have you tried "doc permute" yet?
Javed mohd
el 7 de Mzo. de 2018
Hi, Order vector [1:first dim(row) 2:second dim(col) 3:third dim(Z)] so if you want to transpose rows and columns keeping the same Z, your vector would be [2 1 3]
Respuesta aceptada
Más respuestas (2)
James Tursa
el 25 de En. de 2012
Another way to do 2D slice transposing of an nD Array:
mtimesx(1,A,'t')
You can find mtimesx on the FEX here:
href=""<http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/25977-mtimesx-fast-matrix-multiply-with-multi-dimensional-support</a>>
Ali
el 24 de En. de 2012
0 votos
2 comentarios
Walter Roberson
el 24 de En. de 2012
The third dimension has length 1, and it is left where it is, so the third dimension is 1 afterwards. Trailing 1's from the third dimension onward are not explicitly shown in MATLAB. An array which is 2x2 is also 2x2x1x1x1x1x1 but it would not serve any useful purpose to explicitly display the 250-some-odd trailing subscripts that are all exactly "1".
Andrew Newell
el 24 de En. de 2012
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