meaning of the notation of accessing the elements of the 2D matrix using 4 subscripts?

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Yashvanth L
Yashvanth L le 20 Juin 2018
Commenté : Stephen23 le 20 Juin 2018
Recently, I saw that some people use four sub-scripts to access the elements of a 2D matrix! For eg,If A=[1,2,3,4 ; 5,6,7,8 ; 9,10,11,12 ; 13,14,15,16], then the command, A(1,2,1,1) yields me an answer of 2.
How? What's the meaning of this command? Thanks in advance!!
  2 commentaires
Jan
Jan le 20 Juin 2018
Writing A(1,2,1,1) is valid, but simply confusing and misleading for the reader.
Stephen23
Stephen23 le 20 Juin 2018
"How? What's the meaning of this command?"
All arrays implicitly have infinite trailing singleton dimensions. You can easily check this yourself:
>> size(A,3)
ans = 1
>> size(A,4)
ans = 1
>> size(A,99)
ans = 1
>> size(A,999)
ans = 1
>> size(A,9999)
ans = 1

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Réponses (1)

MUHAMMED IRFAN
MUHAMMED IRFAN le 20 Juin 2018
For a 2d Matrix, A(1,2,1,1) is equivalent to A(1,2).
Consider it as A(dimension1,dim2,dim3,dim4). As it is a 2d matrix, the value of dim3,dim4,dim5... will be 1.
ie, A(1,2,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1) will also give you the value 2 !!
  1 commentaire
Jan
Jan le 20 Juin 2018
+1. Exactly. In Matlab singleton trailing dimensions are ignored.
x = zeros(2,3,1)
size(x) % [2, 3]
size(x, 9) % 1

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