How can I split a vector?

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Stephanie Diaz
Stephanie Diaz am 2 Jun. 2017
Kommentiert: Stephanie Diaz am 5 Jun. 2017
Hi,
I have a vector that looks something like:
v=[1,2,3,4,1,2,3,4,1,2,3]
I need to separate this vector into chunks of 1-n, with n being less than 1. So in the above example, this vector would be separated into the following:
[1,2,3,4] [1,2,3,4] [1,2,3]
I then have to count the number of elements in each of these, like:
[4] [4] [3]
These values can then be stored in another vector. How can I achieve this?
  2 Kommentare
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 2 Jun. 2017
If you had
[ 3 4 2 3]
then how would you know if the breakpoints should be
[3 4] [2 3]
or
[3 4], [2], [3]
since the 2 might be "started a new cycle that happens to contain only one element" followed by "started a new cycle that happens to contain only one element" ?
Is it the case that a value followed by a smaller value always signals the end of a cycle, but that a value followed by a greater value never signals the end of a cycle? Is it as simple, in other words, as looking for places where a value is followed by a smaller value?
Stephanie Diaz
Stephanie Diaz am 5 Jun. 2017
Hi @Walter, the breakpoint will always be a value of 1. I can never have "[3423]" because the numbers will always start at 1 and ascend, but can end at any value.

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Akzeptierte Antwort

Guillaume
Guillaume am 3 Jun. 2017
As you haven't answered Walter's answer it's difficult to know what you want exactly. Assuming you want to split your vector in monotonically increasing sequences, then:
v=[1,2,3,4,1,2,3,4,1,2,3]
seqlengths = diff([0, find(diff(v) < 0), numel(v)])
sequences = mat2cell(v, 1, seqlengths)
Note: the same algorithm also works for Phil's answer which assumes that a sequence starts at 1.
seqlengths = diff([find(v == 1) - 1, numel(v)]) %assumes that first sequence starts with 1
sequences = mat2cell(v, 1, seqlengths)
  4 Kommentare
Guillaume
Guillaume am 5 Jun. 2017
It basically finds where the transition between the sequences occur. In the first case, it's when the difference between two consecutive numbers is negative, in the second case it's just before a 1. The difference between the indices of these transitions is thus the length of each sequence.
Stephanie Diaz
Stephanie Diaz am 5 Jun. 2017
@Guillaume got it, thanks!

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Weitere Antworten (1)

Phil
Phil am 3 Jun. 2017
I think the following function will do what you want i.e. take a vector and split it wherever a 1 occurs:
function splitVectors = getSplitVectors(originalVector)
splitIndexes = find(originalVector==1);
numSplits = numel(splitIndexes);
splitVectors = cell(numSplits, 1);
for i=1:numSplits-1
splitVectors{i} = originalVector(splitIndexes(i):splitIndexes(i+1)-1);
end
splitVectors{numSplits} = originalVector(splitIndexes(numSplits):end);
end
example usage:
>> v = [1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3];
>> splits = getSplitVectors(v);
'splits' is a cell array, you can access each of the vectors with curly braces as follows:
>> splits{1}
ans =
1 2 3 4
>> splits{2}
ans =
1 2 3 4
>> splits{3}
ans =
1 2 3
To get the counts of elements you could then do something like:
>> counts = zeros(numel(splits), 1)
>> for i=1:numel(counts)
counts(i) = numel(splits{i})
end
  2 Kommentare
Phil
Phil am 3 Jun. 2017
Of course, if all you require is the counts and you don't need to keep the split vectors, then all the information you need to do that is in 'splitIndexes'; you just need to take the difference between neighbouring elements. Pay special attention to the last count though.
Stephanie Diaz
Stephanie Diaz am 5 Jun. 2017
@Phil thank you!

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