overly convoluted elseif condition

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Nafila Farheen
Nafila Farheen el 15 de Nov. de 2019
Respondida: Steven Lord el 15 de Nov. de 2019
Hi, I am writing a code that uses too many else if conditions.I am wondering is there an easy way to that.
function y=gain(x)
for jj=1:4
p(jj)=1-jj/128;
end
if x==1
y=p(1);
elseif x==2
y=p(2)
elseif x==3
y=p(3);
elseif x==4
y=p(4);
else y==1;
end

Respuesta aceptada

Bob Thompson
Bob Thompson el 15 de Nov. de 2019
You can replace all of them with a single statement and indexing.
if x>=1 & x<=4
y = p(x);
else
y = 1;
end

Más respuestas (2)

ME
ME el 15 de Nov. de 2019
function y=gain(x)
for jj=1:4
p(jj)=1-jj/128;
end
if x<=4
y=p(x);
else
y=1;
end
end
I have assumed here that your final y==1 was supposed to assign y=1 if x is anything else that 1-4. If that is incorrect then just adjust that last part.

Steven Lord
Steven Lord el 15 de Nov. de 2019
The approaches suggested by Bob Nbob and ME each work if the only values x can take in the range [1, 4] are integer values. If it can take values like 2.5 or pi, I'd use ismember.
% Sample data
x = [1, 2, 2.5 pi, 4, 42]
p = x.^2 + x
% Locate values of x that are 1, 2, 3, or 4
M = ismember(x, 1:4)
% Start y off with the default value of 1 and the right size (the same size as x)
y = ones(size(x))
% Fill in the elements of y where x is 1, 2, 3, or 4 with the right elements of p
y(M) = p(M)
% Let's do something with the other elements too to illustrate the technique
y(~M) = x(~M)

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