How can I eliminate unwanted zeros from a matrix?
    6 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
  
       Afficher commentaires plus anciens
    
e.g I want to make this:
1,1,1,1,0,0
1,1,0,0,0,0
1,0,0,0,0,0
1,1,1,1,1,0
into this:
1,1,1,1
1,1
1
1,1,1,1,1
...
Thanks
3 commentaires
  Guillaume
      
      
 le 16 Juin 2016
				Catherine, please start your own question rather than adding to somebody's else.
  Roger Stafford
      
      
 le 17 Juin 2016
				@Catherine: Let A be your original matrix. You can accomplish what you want with:
   T = A~=0;
   n = sum(T,2);
   m = max(n);
   B = nan(size(A,1),m);
   for k = 1:size(A,1)
     B(k,m-n(k)+1:m) = A(k,T(k,:)); % <-- B is the result
   end
Réponses (2)
  Justin
      
 le 24 Avr 2014
        
      Modifié(e) : per isakson
      
      
 le 17 Juin 2016
  
      It depends on what you are trying to end up with exactly but a good approach would be to set all zero values to NaN. NaNs wont show up in plots and you can use nanmean() or other functions which ignore NaNs to work with your matrix. This will also retain the shape of your matrix.
arr = [1 1 0; 1 0 1; 0 0 1];
arr =
     1     1     0
     1     0     1
     0     0     1
arr(arr==0) = nan
arr =
     1     1   NaN
     1   NaN     1
   NaN   NaN     1
Another option is to use a sparse matrix where the memory only retains information about the index of values.
   sparse(arr)
ans =
   (1,1)        1
   (2,1)        1
   (1,2)        1
   (2,3)        1
   (3,3)        1
You could even convert the array into a cell array and use cellfun to replace all the zeros with an empty array. It would be much more difficult to operate on the information then though.
What are you trying to accomplish with the data?
1 commentaire
  per isakson
      
      
 le 24 Avr 2014
        Hint:
    >> num = [ 1,1,1,1,0,0 ];
    >> num( num == 0 ) = []
    num =
         1     1     1     1
6 commentaires
  Image Analyst
      
      
 le 24 Avr 2014
				Or the output could be a cell array where you can have different sized rows in each cell. But I don't know why you'd want to mess with that or even want what he's asking for in the first place. Chances are he won't need what he asked for once we learn what he plans on doing with the result.
  per isakson
      
      
 le 24 Avr 2014
				
      Modifié(e) : per isakson
      
      
 le 24 Avr 2014
  
			Agree! I know, I should not try to answer questions like this one.
Voir également
Catégories
				En savoir plus sur Creating and Concatenating Matrices dans Help Center et File Exchange
			
	Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!






