Sure:
I = [1, 3, 1, 4;
2, 3, 2, 4];
But it is very unclear if that is what you really want. Does your grouping in the matrixes indicate that you have some meaning with (1,3) (1,4) (2,3) and (2,4) as pairs of indices? If so you might want to make the matrix a 3-D array:
I(:,:,2) = [3,4;
3,4];
I(:,:,1) = [1,1;
2 2];
Then you could potentially grow that array in in the third dimension as you go along - which you seem to indicate with your second array I where you have the elements grouped in triplets?
If you need to go completely arbitrary with varying length of index-lists, cell-arrays might give you a solution:
I{1,1} = [1,3];
I{1,2} = [1,4];
I{2,1} = [2,3];
I{2,2} = [1 4 3 576 1];
HTH
0 Comments
Sign in to comment.