Why does accumarray require vals and subs to be of the same size?

1 vue (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Jonathan
Jonathan le 23 Juin 2014
Commenté : Cedric le 23 Juin 2014
Hi,
I understand this is a built-in function and that "legacy constraints" might be the answer, but still I'm really wondering why the inputs `subs` and `vals` need to be of the same size in `accumarray`.
IMO, a sufficient input check on subs (forgetting about input cells..) would be something like
subs = floor(subs);
assert( all(subs>0) && all(subs <= numel(vals)), 'Index out ouf bounds.' );
I really don't understand this constraint, can someone explain the logic behind this?

Réponse acceptée

Jan
Jan le 23 Juin 2014
The documentation of accumarray is one of the most complicated instructions I've read. It cannot compete with the cute clarity of the other parts of Matlab's excellent docs.
The job of accumarray is "accumulating elements of the vector val using the elements of subs as indices". Therefore the number of values and the corresponding indices must be equal. The i.th value is accumulated accoring to the i.th subs element.
  3 commentaires
Jonathan
Jonathan le 23 Juin 2014
My mistake sorry, I just understood your last sentence and Matlab's documentation... It's all clear now. Thanks :)
Cedric
Cedric le 23 Juin 2014
Yep, understand each element of subs as the "address" where to stack the corresponding element of vals before applying the accumulation function.

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Plus de réponses (0)

Catégories

En savoir plus sur Logical dans Help Center et File Exchange

Tags

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by