Subtracting Vector from a Matrix
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Paul Rogers
am 21 Nov. 2019
Bearbeitet: Adam Danz
am 21 Nov. 2019
I have the matrix a (8x1001) and b (1x1001) as in attached.
a and b can change in size.
How do I substract b from each row of a and put in a new matrix c?
Thanks.
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Akzeptierte Antwort
Jan
am 21 Nov. 2019
Matlab can subtract vectors from matrices automatically since R2016b - so called "auto expanding". Do you use an older version? Then:
c = bsxfun(@minus, a, b)
5 Kommentare
Jan
am 21 Nov. 2019
@Adam: While repmat is (or at least was) an M-function, you can omit the overhead:
c = a - b(ones(1, 8), :);
Adam Danz
am 21 Nov. 2019
Bearbeitet: Adam Danz
am 21 Nov. 2019
Good idea, Jan. I would have expected the ones() method to be faster than repmat(), too. But I timed both methods 500000 times and it turns out that the repmat() is actually faster. I repeated this a few times with consistent results. The boxplots below show the results of the 500k reps with outliers removed.
a = repmat((1:8)',1,12);
b = repmat(2,1,12);
% Method 1 (red)
c = a - b(ones(1, 8), :);
% Method 2 (blue)
d = a - repmat(b,size(a,1),1);
And including the outliers
Who knows what's going on in either function (closed source).
Weitere Antworten (1)
Adam Danz
am 21 Nov. 2019
"How do I substract b from each row of a and put in a new matrix c?"
As long as the number of columns in b matches the number of columns in a
c = a - b;
Demo:
% Create data
a = repmat((1:8)',1,12);
b = repmat(2,1,12);
c = a - b;
3 Kommentare
Jan
am 21 Nov. 2019
Obviously the sizes are not matching. Trust Matlab. See:
size(a)
size(b)
What do you get?
Adam Danz
am 21 Nov. 2019
Bearbeitet: Adam Danz
am 21 Nov. 2019
See the 2nd line of my answer:
As long as the number of columns in b matches the number of columns in a
This requirement is met for the data you provided in matrix a and matrix b in your mat files.
load('a.mat')
load('b.mat')
size(a) % 8 1001
size(b) % 1 1001
c = a-b;
size(c) % 8 1001
If that requirement is not met, you cannot perform matrix subtraction without defining how you plan to resolve the size mismatch.
[update]
If your matlab release is prior to r2016a, see Jan's answer which avoids implicit expansion. This is why it's always good to include your matlab release in the field where it is requested while writing your question.
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