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combination of two matrices

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Najiya Omar
Najiya Omar el 12 de Dic. de 2016
Comentada: James Tursa el 13 de Dic. de 2016
I have two matrices (160,12) in size. I want to put them in one matrix (320,12)by making the first 40 rows in matrix 1 following by the first 40 rwos in matrix 2, creating the first 80 rows of the new matrix. the second 40 rows in matrix 1 following by the second 40 rwos in matrix 2, creating the second 80 rows and so on.
Thank you in advance!!!

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James Tursa
James Tursa el 13 de Dic. de 2016
A = 160 x 12 matrix
B = 160 x 12 matrix
Ar = reshape(A',40*12,[]);
Br = reshape(B',40*12,[]);
result = reshape([Ar;Br],12,[])';
  1 comentario
Najiya Omar
Najiya Omar el 13 de Dic. de 2016
Amazing!! thank you James so so much

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John BG
John BG el 13 de Dic. de 2016
There is not need to reshape
[szA1 szA2]=size(A);[szB1 szB2]=size(B);
[A(:,[1:floor(szA2/2)]) B(:,[1:floor(szA2/2)]) A(:,[floor(szA2/2)+1:end]) B(:,[floor(szA2/2)+1:end])]
  3 comentarios
John BG
John BG el 13 de Dic. de 2016
reshaping implies pulling all elements one by one, putting them in a long string, and then putting them back in the desired matrix shape.
Instead, by directly addressing a partial range of the original matrix oneu saves time that may be noticeable if the matrix is big.
Regards
John BG
James Tursa
James Tursa el 13 de Dic. de 2016
Reshaping a full matrix produces a shared data copy, not a deep data copy. So no elements get moved in memory at all.

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