Fastest way to match elements in two vectors and return indices?
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I have the code below to assemble data taken from several files. The outer loop isn't really important. Once in it, it first uses two files to construct a grid of x,y coordinates. Then, in each of the xyf files, there are four columns: x coordinates, y coordinates, u data, and v data. The x,y pairs are predetermined and match those constructed in the grid. However, there isn't always data in the xyf files for every x,y pair, so a simple reshape won't work. For example:
x1 y1 u11 v11
x1 y3 u13 v13
Here, there's no u or v data reported at x1,y2, so it just skips to the next one. The goal is to assemble the u and v data each into an array whose first two dimensions match the dimensions of the grid and whose third dimension is the number of xyf files. I've done this below by finding the index of each x and y coordinate on the grid I construct and then putting each u and v in the right place using those indices. It's slow. I only do this once for each data set, so changing the format of the input data is probably not worth it. It seems there should at least be a way to remove the finds from the loop, but I haven't found a way that preserves the order of the matches. I've attached sample files to use. Can this go faster?
cal = 0.0136; % cm/pix
dt = 0.005; % seconds
vcal = dt/cal; % seconds*pix/cm
folders = {'folder'};
names = {'name'};
for k = 1:length(folders)
path = ['mypath' folders{k}];
cd (path);
pivgridI = importdata('grdUsedI_001.dat',' ',2);
pivgridJ = importdata('grdUsedJ_001.dat',' ',2);
xgrid = pivgridJ.data(1,:); xgrid = [xgrid(2:end),xgrid(end)+32]; % ad hoc fix
ygrid = pivgridI.data(:,1);
n = length(xgrid); m = length(ygrid); % expected size of space array
[Xq,Yq] = meshgrid(xgrid,ygrid);
files = dir([path '\xyf*.dat']); % get file names
L = length(files);
ui = NaN(m,n,L); vi = ui;
for i = 1:L
fid = fopen([path '\' files(i).name]);
Data = textscan(fid,'%f %f %f %f %f');
fclose(fid);
Data = cell2mat(Data);
x = Data(:,2);
y = Data(:,3);
u = Data(:,4);
v = Data(:,5);
for j = 1:length(x)
[~,xind] = find(Xq == x(j),1);
[yind,~] = find(Yq == y(j),1);
ui(yind,xind,i) = u(j);
vi(yind,xind,i) = v(j);
end
end
save(names{k},'ui','vi')
end
Respuestas (2)
the cyclist
el 29 de En. de 2020
I have to admit that I have not dug into your code, but it sounds like the ismember function might be useful.
Guillaume
el 29 de En. de 2020
Editada: Guillaume
el 29 de En. de 2020
I haven't tried to fully understand your code. A few comments:
- Don't cd into directories. Use fullfile to build paths, so instead of
cd (path);
pivgridI = importdata('grdUsedI_001.dat',' ',2);
use
pivgridI = importdata(fullfile(path, 'grdUsedI_001.dat'),' ',2);
It's safer and faster.
- Similarly use fullfile to build paths instead of using string concatenation
- I'd recommend more targeted import functions than importdata. In particular, readmatrix or readtable are better overall.
Anyway, to answer your question something like this would be much simpler:
pivGridI = readmatrix('grdUsedI_001.txt', 'NumHeaderLines', 2);
pivGridJ = readmatrix('grdUsedJ_001.txt', 'NumHeaderLines', 2);
%haven't fully understood what you're doing afterward
[Yq, Xq] = ndgrid(pivGridI(:, 1), [pivGridJ(1, 2:end), pivGridJ(1, end)+32]);
ui = nan(size(Xq));
vi = nan(size(Xq));
xyf = readtable('xyf_001_000099.txt')
xyf.Properties.VariableNames = {'row', 'x', 'y', 'u', 'v'}
[found, where] = ismember(xyf{:, {'x', 'y'}}, [Xq(:), Yq(:)], 'rows');
assert(all(found), 'Some coordinates in xyf file are not part of the grid');
ui(where) = xyf.u;
vi(where) = xyf.v;
Note that some locations are duplicated in your xyf file. It's unclear why and it looks like the u and v are the same for the duplicates so it probably doesn't matter. With the above, the last value for each location is the one that will end up in the array.
3 comentarios
Guillaume
el 30 de En. de 2020
Those repeated values are not duplicates and do matter.
Then you need to explain what should be done with them, since you can only put one value in the corresponding element of u of an v.
" Both of those (I'm pretty sure) only provide the first or last, but not all elements that meet the criteria"
No, the code I wrote do give you the destination (in where) for each xy pair of xyf including duplicated ones. I then used standard indexing to store the corresponding values. When given the same destination for several elements, standard indexing stores the last of these elements in the destination. The code can be easily change to do something else (store the mean, sum, first?). For example, if you wanted to store the sum of the u and v that are at the same x and y, you'd replace the last lines with
[row, col] = sub2ind(size(Xq), where);
ui = accumarray([row, col], xyf.u, size(Xq), @sum, NaN); %and there' no longer a need to preallocate ui and vi
vi = accumarray([row, col], xyf.v, size(Xq), @sum, NaN);
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