Binornd draws '1' every time

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Henry
Henry am 8 Jul. 2014
Kommentiert: Henry am 8 Jul. 2014
I'm running a script in which I use binornd(1,0.5) within a for loop, and the output is '1' every time. When I copy paste to the command window, it behaves as expected (I haven't done a full statistical test, but at least I get both '0's and '1's as outputs). In the same script, I use randi, which seems to be behaving normally..
Moving the binornd line to different positions in the script does not make a difference, and neither does adding rng('shuffle') just above. Finally, I use binornd(1,p) in another loop, where p varies on each iteration, and I also get only '1's as outputs. So it seems to be a problem specific to binornd.
  5 Kommentare
Henry
Henry am 8 Jul. 2014
Apologies, this was not supposed to be included - I used it as a test, but it didn't resolve the problem (although it did slow things down as you say).
I've now found another clue - even randi([0 1]) is causing the same problem, although randi with non-binary arguments is working fine, and again randi([0 1]) works fine from the command line! Very strange...
Henry
Henry am 8 Jul. 2014
Can't see why, but problem resolved after making some changes elsewhere in the code. Thanks everyone.

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Antworten (2)

Jos (10584)
Jos (10584) am 8 Jul. 2014
what if you execute
which binornd
just before the calls? Do the outputs differ based on the situation (script vs. command line). It could be that you have two different versions ...
  1 Kommentar
Henry
Henry am 8 Jul. 2014
Thanks for the response. I tried this and I get the same version both times: C:\Program Files\MATLAB\R2014a\toolbox\stats\stats\binornd.m
But yes the outputs do differ between these 2 situations. I've now noticed that the 2nd time I call it, it is indeed working (just that the p values were high), but the first time is still failing (line 5 of the code I entered above). And changing p to any non-zero value below 1 does not change the situation.

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Shashank Prasanna
Shashank Prasanna am 8 Jul. 2014
Bearbeitet: Shashank Prasanna am 8 Jul. 2014
Why don't you generate all of your random numbers before hand and just use index into the array at each loop iteration? It should be faster and cleaner:
randBin = binornd(limit,0.5);
while count<limit
matrix=fastest_matrix;
a(count)=randi([1 order]);
b(count)=randi([1 order]);
t(count)=randBin(count);
...
  3 Kommentare
Shashank Prasanna
Shashank Prasanna am 8 Jul. 2014
My bad, I meant to say:
randBin = binornd(1,0.5,limit,1);
Henry
Henry am 8 Jul. 2014
OK thanks. And the problem resolved itself a few minutes ago when I made some changes somewhere else in the code. It's still not at all clear to me why, but at least it's working!

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