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Why won't cells populate via if-else statements?

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Kyle Lyman
Kyle Lyman am 21 Mai 2021
Kommentiert: J. Alex Lee am 22 Mai 2021
I am taking the transpose of the last three rows of matrix "con". What I want to do is search each newly transposed column for specific numbers using find() (i.e. 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9). I want each of these specific numbers to correspond to a 2x1 matrix, each of which is to be inserted into a cell structure. Then I want to use cell2array to form a matrix. For example [1;2;3;4;5;6] maps to [1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10;11;12]. My issue is that when I run the code T is displaying as an empty matrix (T=[ ]). I have attached the code down below. Thank you in advance!
clc
clear all
close all
con=[1 2 3 4 5 6; %Connectivity matrix
1 2 3 4 5 6;
3 5 4 8 7 9;
4 5 6 2 5 7];
Con_Transpose=con(2:end,:).' %Transpose of last three rows of connectivity matrix
width=1:1:size(Con_Transpose,2);
for i=1:length(width)
a={};
if Con_Transpose(:,width(i))==1;
a{find(Con_Transpose==1,1),1}=[1;2]
end
if Con_Transpose(:,width(i))==2;
a{find(Con_Transpose==2,1),1}=[3;4]
end
if Con_Transpose(:,width(i))==3;
a{find(Con_Transpose==3,1),1}=[5;6]
end
if Con_Transpose(:,width(i))==4;
a{find(Con_Transpose==4,1),1}=[7;8]
end
if Con_Transpose(:,width(i))==5;
a{find(Con_Transpose==5,1),1}=[9;10]
end
if Con_Transpose(:,width(i))==6;
a{find(Con_Transpose==6,1),1}=[11;12]
end
if Con_Transpose(:,width(i))==7;
a{find(Con_Transpose==7,1),1}=[13;14]
end
if Con_Transpose(:,width(i))==8;
a{find(Con_Transpose==8,1),1}=[15;16]
end
if Con_Transpose(:,width(i))==9;
a{find(Con_Transpose==9,1),1}=[17;18]
end
T=cell2mat(a)
end

Antworten (1)

J. Alex Lee
J. Alex Lee am 21 Mai 2021
Bearbeitet: J. Alex Lee am 21 Mai 2021
The if statements are probably your problem...you are comparing a column vector with scalars, which off the top of my head I don't know the behavior of.
I won't attempt to fix your code, but consider this strategy that's based on indexing, doesn't need to loop, and doesn't touch cell arrays...does it do what you want:
% generate your "map" from 1->[1;2], 2->[3;4], 4->[7;8], etc.
rmap = reshape(1:18,2,[])
rmap = 2×9
1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18
% test the mechanism
x = [1 4 6]
x = 1×3
1 4 6
a = reshape(rmap(:,x),[],1)
a = 6×1
1 2 7 8 11 12
% now solve your problem
con=[1 2 3 4 5 6; %Connectivity matrix
1 2 3 4 5 6;
3 5 4 8 7 9;
4 5 6 2 5 7];
Con_Transpose=con(2:end,:).'
Con_Transpose = 6×3
1 3 4 2 5 5 3 4 6 4 8 2 5 7 5 6 9 7
sz = [2,1].*size(Con_Transpose)
sz = 1×2
12 3
T = reshape(rmap(:,Con_Transpose),sz)
T = 12×3
1 5 7 2 6 8 3 9 9 4 10 10 5 7 11 6 8 12 7 15 3 8 16 4 9 13 9 10 14 10
  2 Kommentare
Kyle Lyman
Kyle Lyman am 22 Mai 2021
Hey J. Alex Lee! Thank you for the prompt response. The method that you presented certainly works for matrices that have an even number of elements (i.e. size(con,2)*(size(con,1)-1)=18 in the example you replied to). However, when I change the matrix "con" to have an odd number of elements, I receive the error:
"Error using reshape
Product of known dimensions, 2, not divisible into total number of elements, 9.
Error in DegreeOfFreedom (line 8)
rmap = reshape(1:range,2,[])"
The code that reproduces this error is listed below:
con=[1 2 3; %The first line is local degrees of freedom, thus we focus on the second row through the end row, which sums to 9 total elements.
6 7 9;
4 1 6;
9 7 2]
Con_Transpose=con(2:end,:).'
range=numel(con)-size(con,2);
% generate your "map" from 1->[1;2], 2->[3;4], 4->[7;8], etc.
rmap = reshape(1:range,2,[])
x=[con(2:end,:)];
a = reshape(rmap(:,x),[],1);
sz = [2,1].*size(Con_Transpose);
T = reshape(rmap(:,Con_Transpose),sz)
J. Alex Lee
J. Alex Lee am 22 Mai 2021
So what does your conversion map look like...
1->1,2
2->3,4
3->5,6
4->7,8
5->9
6->?
7->?
8->?
9->?

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