Adding Column values of a matrix
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Hi, I have a matrix like below.
all_one_matrix(:,:,1)
ans =
Columns 1 through 8
0.1979 0.1979 0.1354 0.0729 0.3542 0.3021 0.1771 0.0729
0.4167 0.0938 0.2708 0.3958 0.0417 0.1042 0.3438 0.4583
0.1250 0.1771 0.1354 0.1146 0.0938 0.1771 0.1771 0.1042
0.1563 0.1146 0.1563 0.1667 0.1458 0.0833 0.1354 0.1146
0.0417 0.0521 0.0521 0.0729 0 0.0625 0.1250 0.1250
Columns 9 through 16
0.1458 0.2813 0.1458 0.3125 0.1771 0.1875 0.0938 0.1875
0.1875 0.1146 0.2292 0.1354 0.0625 0.2708 0.2396 0.0729
0.0625 0.0521 0.1563 0.0417 0.0938 0.1042 0.2604 0.1042
0.2083 0.2500 0.1042 0.0729 0.2813 0.1042 0.1042 0.0833
0.0625 0.1354 0.1875 0.0938 0.1458 0.2292 0.1979 0.1771
i want to add the values of column row wise. i.e i have 16 column in row first, i need the sum of all 16 column of first row, row 2, row 3, row 4 and row 5.
how can i do it ? thanks in advance
1 Kommentar
Azzi Abdelmalek
am 6 Feb. 2013
Give a small example that correspond to your problem
Antworten (1)
Walter Roberson
am 6 Feb. 2013
sum(all_one_matrix(:,:,1), 2)
9 Kommentare
M@lik Ali
am 6 Feb. 2013
Walter Roberson
am 6 Feb. 2013
You said "Like in above case fset(:,:,3) will be fset(:,:,1) but actually it was 3" but you are referring to the same array in both cases. Perhaps you meant to refer to iundex or sorted_fset in one of those two variables?
The first output index would be 3 because you set plane 3 to all zeros and rand() is always greater than 0 so plane 3 is going to sort earlier than plane 1 or 2. The 3 in the first position indicates that the 3rd entity was what sorted first.
M@lik Ali
am 6 Feb. 2013
Walter Roberson
am 6 Feb. 2013
Look at iundex(:,:,1)
M@lik Ali
am 6 Feb. 2013
Walter Roberson
am 6 Feb. 2013
[B,IX] = sort(A,...) [...]
If A has repeated elements of equal value, the returned indices preserve the original ordering.
M@lik Ali
am 6 Feb. 2013
Walter Roberson
am 6 Feb. 2013
Please give a specific example of data and the command you use, and show the particular output value we should look at and the result you expect and the result you currently get.
M@lik Ali
am 6 Feb. 2013
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