Using Randn with min and max matrices
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Zena Assaad
am 28 Nov. 2016
Kommentiert: Zena Assaad
am 28 Nov. 2016
Hi all,
Is it possible to use randn with the min and max values being matrices?
For Example:
A = [1x28] %The numbers vary within this matrix
B = [1x28] %The numbers vary within this matrix
r = A + (B-A).*randn(500,28);
I'm trying to understand if this is mathematically possible, considering there are multiple min and max values. Will Matlab allocate each column a separate min and max value (this is what I am hoping it will do)? Or should this problem simply be tackled using a different approach?
What I am looking for is to create a random [500x28] matrix with varying min and max values that are specified in matrices A and B. I have used randn before for integer values and it has worked beautifully. I just don't know if it is mathematically correct to use it in this context. I would love some thoughts and information on the best approach to take.
Thanks in advance.
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Walter Roberson
am 28 Nov. 2016
You wrote
r = A + (B-A).*randn(500,28);
but the form you are using does not apply to randn(). randn() has infinite tails.
If you switch to
r = A + (B-A).*rand(500,28);
then that works fine in R2016b or later. In R2016a or earlier you would need
r = bsxfun(@plus, A, bsxfun(@times, B-A, rand(500,28)) );
3 Kommentare
Walter Roberson
am 28 Nov. 2016
With the bsxfun, it would copy the per-column (A) and ((B-A)) to all of the rows
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Image Analyst
am 28 Nov. 2016
You could do this:
A = randi(99, 1,28) % The numbers vary within this matrix
B = randi(99, 1,28) % The numbers vary within this matrix
r = zeros(500, 28);
for col = 1 : size(A, 2)
r(:, col) = A(col) + (B(col) - A(col)) .* rand(500, 1);
end
You might want to make sure B is more than A if that's what you expect.
3 Kommentare
Image Analyst
am 28 Nov. 2016
OK, though it can be a bit cryptic for beginners. That's why I went with something I thought would be easier for you to understand. Though if you can remember how bsxfun works, it can be handy.
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