Vectorisation of a simple for loop

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David Schranz
David Schranz le 28 Sep 2016
Commenté : David Schranz le 29 Sep 2016
Will it be possible to write this code vectorised?
x=ones(10,1);
a=zeros(size(x));
b=zeros(size(x));
c=zeros(size(x));
for i = 1:size(x,1)-1
a(i+1) = a(i)+x(i)+b(i);
b(i+1) = b(i)+a(i)+c(i);
c(i+1) = c(i)+b(i)+c(i);
end
Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Réponse acceptée

Thorsten
Thorsten le 28 Sep 2016
A = [1 1 0 0 ; 1 1 1 0 ; 0 1 2 0; 1 0 0 1];
Q = cell2mat(arrayfun(@(i) A^i, 1:9, 'Uni', false));
Q = [zeros(1, 4); reshape(Q(end,:), 4, [])'];
a = Q(:,1); b = Q(:,2); c = Q(:,3);
  1 commentaire
David Schranz
David Schranz le 29 Sep 2016
Thank you very much for your solution. I would have never figured that out.

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Plus de réponses (2)

Teja Muppirala
Teja Muppirala le 28 Sep 2016
Just wondering, but what is your purpose in vectorizing that code? If it's to make it faster, I don't think you can do much better than what you've already got, especially if you have a recent version of MATLAB.
If it's to make it more readable, or more general (flexibly deal with more variables), so you don't have to keep writing every letter like this
a(i+1)=...
b(i+1)=...
c(i+1)=...
d(i+1)= ...
...
then you could use matrix equations.
x=ones(10,1); % External input
A = [1 1 0; 1 1 1; 0 1 2]; % State matrix
B = [1;0;0]; % Input matrix
v = zeros(length(B),length(x)); % v contains [a,b,c]
for i = 1:size(x,1)-1
v(:,i+1) = A*v(:,i) + B*x(i);
end
For many applications, matrix representation is usually how this type of calculation is expressed.
  1 commentaire
David Schranz
David Schranz le 29 Sep 2016
Yes, I try to make things faster. And yes it looks like the vectorised version is not faster. Nevertheless your code helped me to understand the solution provided by Thorsten. Also I consider using your code sample to flexibly deal with more variables. Thank you very much for your answer.

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KSSV
KSSV le 28 Sep 2016
It is very much possible:
https://in.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/81775-recursive-vector-operation-without-for-loops
  2 commentaires
Stephen23
Stephen23 le 28 Sep 2016
Modifié(e) : Stephen23 le 28 Sep 2016
@Dr. Siva Srinivas Kolukula: the solution presented in that answer, and indeed the filter command itself, is a fundamentally 1D solution, even if applied to an array. The question above has dependencies between the variables a, b, and c. How do you propose to represent these using a 1D filter?
KSSV
KSSV le 28 Sep 2016
If I am not mistaken, a similar question appeared a week ago which was vectorised using filter...I searched for the question, but could not get it.

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