Loop through hundreds of matrices to change values larger than 1 to 0

2 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Zoe
Zoe le 19 Oct 2017
Commenté : Zoe le 23 Oct 2017
I have more than 400 matrices, currently I am using "find" to change the values larger than 1 in the matrix to 0 one by one manually with this code:
val = find(yf > 1);
yf(val) = 0;
Is there a way to do it with loop? Please help, thank you.
  3 commentaires
James Tursa
James Tursa le 19 Oct 2017
"... 400 matrices ..."
How are these matrices stored? In individual variables? As part of a cell or struct array? Or ...?
Zoe
Zoe le 19 Oct 2017
Hi Walter, those matrices are actually image data, the value I WANT is actually between 0 and 1 (definitely smaller than 1), and values larger than 1 are noise (background data, etc.)
Hi James, in a 1*452 cell array , so I use
images{1, #}
to read them one by one right now.

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Réponse acceptée

Image Analyst
Image Analyst le 19 Oct 2017
If you want a loop and your images are in the cell array, you can do it like this:
for k = 1 : length(images)
% Extract his one image.
thisImage = images{1, k};
% Reduce/Clip values 1.000001 and larger to 1.
thisImage(thisImage > 1) = 1;
% Stick back into cell array
images{1, k} = thisImage;
end
  3 commentaires
Image Analyst
Image Analyst le 21 Oct 2017
You're welcome, but you probably never should have stored all your images in a cell array in the first place. It takes up a lot of memory and there was probably never a need to have them all in memory simultaneously. You probably could have read your images one at a time and processed them immediately in the loop without storing them all. Anyway, thanks for Accepting the answer.
Zoe
Zoe le 23 Oct 2017
Thank you for letting me know this:)

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Plus de réponses (2)

Star Strider
Star Strider le 19 Oct 2017
Instead of find, I would simply use ‘logical indexing’.
Example
yf = 0.5 + rand(4,5)
yf(yf > 1) = 0
yf =
0.64115 1.2321 1.0209 1.3162 1.1876
1.0121 1.2498 0.71908 1.2939 1.4869
1.2213 0.90732 1.3424 0.96911 1.2699
1.4288 0.73949 1.1629 0.80952 1.3296
yf =
0.64115 0 0 0 0
0 0 0.71908 0 0
0 0.90732 0 0.96911 0
0 0.73949 0 0.80952 0
This should be more efficient, although you will still have to loop through every matrix.
  2 commentaires
Zoe
Zoe le 19 Oct 2017
Thank you for replying! But my question is how are you gonna do the loop?? Sorry I am relatively new to matlab, and I do know lots of functions but I dont know how to loop through my matrices.
Star Strider
Star Strider le 19 Oct 2017
That depends on how your matrices are stored. If each is in a separate file, read the file and then do the replacement.

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James Tursa
James Tursa le 19 Oct 2017
result = cellfun(@(c)c.*(c<=1),images,'uni',false);

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