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Finding the position of the 1st,2nd and 3rd max value in a matrix

79 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Amin
Amin le 29 Nov 2011
Hi, I want to find the position of the 1st,2nd and 3rd maximum value of a matrix.I know that I can find the position of the max value using find() function like:(e.g. X is a matrix)
[i j]=find(X==max(X))
but it gives just the position of max value.
Thanks,
Amin.
  2 commentaires
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 29 Nov 2011
What do you want to have happen if there are duplicate copies of the maximum?
Amin
Amin le 29 Nov 2011
Walter,
This is good question...I have no idea!what do you think?

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Réponse acceptée

Jan
Jan le 29 Nov 2011
If X is not unique, find(X==max(X)) can find more than one element. Then Sven's sort method yields to another reply.
For large arrays sorting is expensive. You can try this:
[max1, ind1] = max(X);
X(ind1) = -Inf;
[max2, ind2] = max(X);
X(ind2) = -Inf;
[max3, ind3] = max(X);
X(ind3) = -Inf;
For X = rand(1, 1e6) this is 4.7 times faster than the SORT-method under Matlab 2009a, Win7/64.
  3 commentaires
Sven
Sven le 30 Nov 2011
Amin, note the "X(:)" part of my answer. Using "(:)" will ensure that max() flattens an n-by-m matrix into a p-by-1 matrix for the purposes of finding its maximum. My ind2sub() command returns the row/column index from the linear index returned by find().
surendra bala
surendra bala le 30 Jan 2018
Thanks. That's a good idea

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Plus de réponses (5)

Sven
Sven le 29 Nov 2011
Hi Amin, try this:
[sortedX, sortedInds] = sort(X(:),'descend');
top3 = sortedInds(1:3)
And if you want to get the (i,j) reference into X, just follow with:
[i, j] = ind2sub(size(X), top3);
Here's a general solution (ala Jan) for the N maximum numbers that will be faster than sort() if you have a (very) large matrix X:
N = 10;
inds = zeros(N,1);
tmpX = X(:);
for i=1:N
[~, inds(i)] = max(tmpX);
tmpX(inds(i)) = -inf;
end
[rows, cols] = ind2sub(size(X), inds);
Note that in my opinion, I'd need X be very large or my calculation to be performed many times in a loop before I'd consider the (simpler) sort() method to be too inefficient.

Edwin Fonkwe
Edwin Fonkwe le 29 Nov 2011
You could run the "find()" function three times. After each time, replace the previously found max in the matrix by a very small number (probably less than the minimum). Hope this helps
  2 commentaires
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 29 Nov 2011
if it was a floating point array, you could replace it with NaN instead of a small number.
Amin
Amin le 29 Nov 2011
FONKWE and Walter,
Thank you for your responses.
Amin.

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Thang Vu
Thang Vu le 22 Jan 2019
Modifié(e) : Thang Vu le 22 Jan 2019
function [U, I] = Xmax(X, i) % i is the x-largest value
for j = 1: i-1
[U, I] = max(X);
X(I) = -Inf;
[U, I] = max(X);
end
after each round you find and change the maximum number to -Inf

Niño Dong Won Shin
Niño Dong Won Shin le 6 Oct 2020
sampleData = ["Samsung Note 9","59","53900";
"Samsung S20 Ultra","150","69900";
"Samsung S10","200","55900";
"Samsung Note 10","46","54900";
"IPhone 11","45","40990"];
%Extract 1st Column
Item =
%Extract 2nd Column and make it as a vector array
Unit =
%Extract 3rd Column and make it as a vector array
UnitCost =
TotalCost =
%Search the most high priced item in the inventory and its current index
[max,index] =
searchMax =
% Tell user

Ishtiaq Khan
Ishtiaq Khan le 10 Nov 2021
The following would given you positions of all elements in one-dimentional array X. For a matrix, you can do a little bit tweaking.
[~,idx] = sort(X);
[~,idx]=sort(idx);
idx=numel(X)+1-idx;

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