Combine columns of multiple arrays using for loop
11 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
Ältere Kommentare anzeigen
Charlotte Findlay
am 21 Mai 2018
Kommentiert: Paolo
am 21 Mai 2018
I am trying to use a for loop to combine columns of multiple arrays in MATLAB.
I want to take column 1 (or i) of the first variable (lat) and combine this with column 1 (or i) of the other three variables (lon, rng, and z), similar to the output expected from the code below.
if true
% Example of output wanted:
test = [lat(:,1) lon(:,1) rng(:,1) z(:,1)];
end
However, I want to repeat this for all 360 columns in each of the four arrays (see attached matlab file).
How would I do this with a for loop?
4 Kommentare
James Tursa
am 21 Mai 2018
Bearbeitet: James Tursa
am 21 Mai 2018
What would the dimensions of the result 'test' be? Are you wanting to stack these variables vertically or horizontally?
Akzeptierte Antwort
Guillaume
am 21 Mai 2018
Bearbeitet: Guillaume
am 21 Mai 2018
Preferably the output would be vertical with the ability to decipher where one column has ended and another starts
Is this for storage or display?.
If for storage, then simply concatenate the variables.
allvars = cat(3, lat, lon, rng, z); %concatenate the variables in the 3rd dimension
%allvars(:, n, :) correspond to column n of the variables
If you wish you can then permute dimensions so that your original variables are then columns,
allvars = permute(cat(3, lat, lon, rng, z), [1 3 2]);
%allvars(:, :, n) corresponds to column n of the variables
edit:
i.e. have another column which labels the first 967 rows as 1 and then the next 967 rows as 2, etc
That can be done as well:
allvars = [reshape(cat(3, lat, lon, rng, z), [], 4), repelem(1:size(lat, 2), size(lat, 1))']
The last column is the index of the original column
1 Kommentar
Charlotte Findlay
am 21 Mai 2018
Bearbeitet: Charlotte Findlay
am 21 Mai 2018
Weitere Antworten (1)
Paolo
am 21 Mai 2018
Hi Charlotte,
The following code creates a multidimensional matrix with 967 rows (first dimension), 4 columns (second dimension) and 360 elements (third dimension).
load('ArrayValuesForLoop_20180521_CFindlay.mat');
%Dimensions.
[rows,columns] = size(lat);
%Number of sheets to combine.
n = 4;
%Initialisation.
output = zeros(rows,n,columns);
for i = 1:columns
output(:,:,i) = [lat(:,i) lon(:,i) rng(:,i) z(:,i)];
end
You can access the output with:
output(:,:,n)
where n is the element you are interested in. As in your example, test will be equal to output(:,:,1).
test = [lat(:,1) lon(:,1) rng(:,1) z(:,1)];
is equivalent to output(:,:,1).
test = [lat(:,2) lon(:,2) rng(:,2) z(:,2)];
is equivalent to output(:,:,2), and so on.
6 Kommentare
Paolo
am 21 Mai 2018
You are welcome, there are many ways this can be done. Guillaume's solution is indeed more elegant, I used a for loop in my solution since that was what you asked for.
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!