How does max choose the answers when there are two identical values in a vector
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xueqi
am 4 Jan. 2015
Kommentiert: Stephen23
am 4 Jan. 2015
Dear All,
Could you help me with clarify this mystery please? I am using the following code to find the maximum value and its index in a vector
[rdeubest,bestcol]=max(rdeus);
In matlab documentation, it says max return the first value when there are identical values in the the vector. As the values are identical, I suppose the statement means max return the index of the first maximum value. But I find sometimes this does not seem to be true. For example, I have
rdeus=[-100000 -100000 -100000 -100000 -100000 -100000 0.848202365959724 0.849479878997915 0.849479878997915 -100000 -100000 -100000 0.848158759181734]
Notice we have rdeus(8)=rdeus(9). But when I run the max code, I get the bestcol=9. Could you offer me some advice about why this happens?
Cheers, Xueq
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Stephen23
am 4 Jan. 2015
Bearbeitet: Stephen23
am 4 Jan. 2015
It works fine for me:
>> rdeus = [-100000,-100000,-100000,-100000,-100000,-100000,0.848202365959724,0.849479878997915,0.849479878997915,-100000,-100000,-100000,0.848158759181734];
>> [C,I] = max(rdeus)
C =
0.84948
I =
8
I suspect that your rdeus(8) and rdeus(9) are not really as similar as you think they are. Are the values generated somewhere else, or defined only at the creation of the matrix rdeus ?
Try this:
fprintf('%.20f\n',rdeus(8:9))
Are they identical? (they are for me)
3 Kommentare
Stephen23
am 4 Jan. 2015
Bearbeitet: Stephen23
am 4 Jan. 2015
The most important thing to understand about numeric calculations (such as with MATLAB) is that they are NOT analytic calculations. The propagation of small differences between the values can become quite significant, like this situation when a user expects analytic-like equality. Some fun things to read about floating point calculations:
You could try defining some kind of max with a tolerance... however this leads to some grouping issues, as is explained here:
The simplest solution may be to simply multiply the values by 1e15 (picking a suitable order), round to the nearest integer and then use max:
>> rdeus = [-100000,-100000,-100000,-100000,-100000,-100000,0.848202365959724,0.849479878997915,0.8494798789979153,-100000,-100000,-100000,0.848158759181734];
>> [~,I] = max(rdeus)
I =
9
>> [~,I] = max(round(rdeus*1e15))
I =
8
>> C = rdeus(I);
But the answer really depends on you: only you know how similar these values must be to count as being "the same".
Stephen23
am 4 Jan. 2015
Does that resolve your situation? If it does, clicking "Accept" is always appreciated. If it doesn't, please explain what remains unclear.
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