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How to take the co-ordinate values in MatLab

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A = [1 0 3 3;
0 0 4 5;
5 0 98 56;
0 2 4 6]
In the above 4*4 matrix, each cell has got x and y coordinates. I need to extract the x and y co-ordinate values for the cells excepting 0.
For example, the coordinates are placed in the below manner having the zero cell omitted
x 1 1 1,....
y 1 3 4,....
Any leads?
  4 Kommentare
Adam Danz
Adam Danz am 13 Jul. 2018
Bearbeitet: Adam Danz am 13 Jul. 2018
I see, so the values in 'A' are all y values and the row indices are the x values. I'll post an answer in a few minutes.
Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 15 Jul. 2018
Vigneshwaran, what a bad way to name variables! Why deliberately choose variable names that fly in the face of hundreds of years of convention? You're choosing x to be the vertical/row coordinate instead of the conventional y. And you're choosing the horizontal/column coordinate of the matrix to be y, instead of the conventional x. Why? Why do it the opposite of everyone else in the world for no reason???
By the way, if you had given the full x and y instead of just the first three numbers and ..., you could have prevented a lot of confusion.

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Akzeptierte Antwort

Nanditha Nirmal
Nanditha Nirmal am 13 Jul. 2018
Hi,
The code below will give you the coordinates you want. This is what you would want to do:
A = [1 0 3 3;0 0 4 5;5 0 98 56; 0 2 4 6];
x=[];
y=[];
for i=1:4
for j=1:4
if A(i,j) ~= 0
x=[x ;i];
y=[y ;j];
end
end
end
  2 Kommentare
vigneshwaran Loganathan
vigneshwaran Loganathan am 14 Jul. 2018
Thank alot, it helped
Adam Danz
Adam Danz am 15 Jul. 2018
Bearbeitet: Adam Danz am 15 Jul. 2018
You can avoid both for-loops and speed up the code with
%Your data (y values)
A = [1 0 3 3;0 0 4 5;5 0 98 56; 0 2 4 6];
% Transpose A (to match your example)
aT = A';
% Your x values
x = repmat((1:size(aT,1))', 1, size(aT,2));
y = repmat(1:size(aT,1), size(aT,2), 1);
% Identify where A==0
zeroIdx = aT==0;
% Extract coordinates where A~=0
xCoord = x(~zeroIdx);
yCoord = y(~zeroIdx);

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Weitere Antworten (2)

Adam Danz
Adam Danz am 13 Jul. 2018
If I'm understanding correctly, your matrix A are all y values and the row indices are the X values (based on your comments above).
%Your data (y values)
A = [1 0 3 3;0 0 4 5;5 0 98 56; 0 2 4 6];
% Your x values
x = repmat((1:size(A,1))', 1, size(A,2));
% Identify where A==0
zeroIdx = A==0;
% Extract coordinates where A~=0
xCoord = x(~zeroIdx);
yCoord = A(~zeroIdx);
% Test: draw your data, circle the chosen coordinates
figure;
plot(A);
hold on
plot(xCoord, yCoord, 'ko')
  2 Kommentare
vigneshwaran Loganathan
vigneshwaran Loganathan am 14 Jul. 2018
Thanks for your time, the above answer by Nandita solved my case Your code gives me the index value
Adam Danz
Adam Danz am 15 Jul. 2018
Nanditha's code gives you the index values. The for-loops in her code record the values of i and j which are index values of A. My code provides the index values for x and the 'A' values for y which is what I thought you were describing by, " if you plot the matrix, the output will have x,y and the index values".
See the comment I left under Nanditha's solution for a simplification.

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Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 15 Jul. 2018
Personally I'd use meshgrid() - a useful function that you might want to learn about:
[rows, columns] = size(A)
[x, y] = meshgrid(1:columns, 1:rows)
mask = A~=0
x = x(mask)
y = y(mask)
  2 Kommentare
Adam Danz
Adam Danz am 15 Jul. 2018
Vigneshwaran, this is the fastest, simplest solution. However, if you want it to conform to your example, you'll need to transpose A and switch the values of x and y.
aT = A';
[rows, columns] = size(aT)
[y, x] = meshgrid(1:columns, 1:rows)
mask = aT~=0
x = x(mask)
y = y(mask)
But reconsider the names of your x and y variables as suggested by Image Analyst above.
vigneshwaran Loganathan
vigneshwaran Loganathan am 16 Jul. 2018
Thanks both, it helped and i will consider the suggestion too

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