How can I extract non-consecutive indices from a vector?
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Ray Smith
am 5 Apr. 2020
Bearbeitet: shaik mohammed ali
am 27 Mai 2024
In 5.2 Extracting Multiple Elements, Further practice "Indices can be non-consecutive numbers. Try extracting the first, third, and sixth elements of density." How?
14 Kommentare
Edward li
am 25 Aug. 2023
Could someone explain the logic behind the parenthese and the brackets. like why is it in that order and what does each mean?
Voss
am 19 Dez. 2023
@Edward li: In this case, the parentheses are used for indexing, and the square brackets are used for array concatenation. [1,3,6] concatenates the scalars 1, 3, and 6 into a single vector, and density([1,3,6]) gets the elements of density at the indices stored in that vector.
See the Special Characters section of this page for more information:
Akzeptierte Antwort
David Hill
am 5 Apr. 2020
If you have a density array (d), then to extract the 1,3,6 elements:
extracted_elements=d([1,3,6]);
21 Kommentare
Image Analyst
am 12 Jul. 2023
@Viktoriia observe it working without commas below:
d = 10 : 10 : 60 % Sample data vector.
extracted_elements = d([1 3 6]) % Get only some of the elements
If you execute that code on your computer what do you see? If you executed different code than above, without commas, then what was that code?
shaik mohammed ali
am 27 Mai 2024
Bearbeitet: shaik mohammed ali
am 27 Mai 2024
yes its working thank you so much
Weitere Antworten (8)
Kakasaheb Nikam
am 12 Mai 2020
density(3)
% extract third element
when we use [ ] square bracket, it extracting specific index position values.
so answer is
extracted_elements = density( [ 1, 3, 6 ] );
2 Kommentare
Diogo Teixeira Fernandes
am 28 Sep. 2021
extracted_elements=density([1,3,6])
it worked for me
0 Kommentare
Girish Pal
am 2 Sep. 2020
p = density(1), density(3), density(6)
2 Kommentare
Stephen23
am 2 Sep. 2020
Bearbeitet: Stephen23
am 2 Sep. 2020
While this does literally what the question requests "...extract non-consecutive indices from a vector", it only assigns the first of the comma-separated list to p, which is unlikely to give the desired effect, nor is it likely to be what the homework task requires.
Ahmed
am 7 Mär. 2024
Extracting Multiple Elements
Instructions are in the task pane to the left. Complete and submit each task one at a time.
This code sets up the activity.
data = [3 0.53 4.0753 NaN;18 1.78 6.6678 2.1328;19 0.86 1.5177 3.6852;20 1.6 3.6375 8.5389;21 3 4.7243 10.157;23 6.11 9.0698 2.8739;38 2.54 5.30023 4.4508]
density = data(:,2)
x = density([1,3,6])
0 Kommentare
Parvin
am 14 Mär. 2024
This code sets up the activity.
data = [3 0.53 4.0753 NaN;18 1.78 6.6678 2.1328;19 0.86 1.5177 3.6852;20 1.6 3.6375 8.5389;21 3 4.7243 10.157;23 6.11 9.0698 2.8739;38 2.54 5.30023 4.4508]
To extract the first, third, and sixth elements of density, use [1 3 6] as an index.
density = [1 3 6]
data(density)
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