intersect function returns only one index why ?
5 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
Ältere Kommentare anzeigen
Sososasa
am 27 Mär. 2014
Beantwortet: the cyclist
am 27 Mär. 2014
Hi,
I have:
A = [1 2 3 4;
1 2 3 4;
5 6 1 2]
B = [1 2]
[~, index] = intersect(A(:,1:2),B(1,:),'rows')
The result I get is:
index = 2
Why is that while I actually have 2 rows in A equal to B
Why I don't get index = 1 and 2
0 Kommentare
Akzeptierte Antwort
Walter Roberson
am 27 Mär. 2014
C = intersect(A,B) returns the data common to both A and B with no repetitions.
Notice the "no repetitions". The two entries in A become the same after extracting the first two columns, so outputting the entry twice would be a repetition.
If A and B are numeric arrays, logical arrays, character arrays, categorical arrays, or cell arrays of strings, then C = A(ia) and C = B(ib).
Notice there that since C is the same size either way, it follows that ia and ib must be the same length. As only one intersection is being returned for C (because the other is a repetition) it follows that only one index is being returned in ia and ib.
You should be considering ismember()
0 Kommentare
Weitere Antworten (1)
the cyclist
am 27 Mär. 2014
The slightly snarky answer is, "That is not what the intersection function returns."
The slightly nicer answer is that if you read the documentation, you'll see that intersect does not return the indices to all rows that are in the intersection.
To do what you want is easy, though:
C = intersect(A(:,1:2),B(1,:),'rows')
indices = find(ismember(A(:,1:2),C,'rows'))
0 Kommentare
Siehe auch
Kategorien
Mehr zu Creating and Concatenating Matrices finden Sie in Help Center und File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!