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My code on n consecutive elements in a matrix

3 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Qingchuan Lyu
Qingchuan Lyu le 11 Juil 2018
Modifié(e) : Matt J le 11 Juil 2018
Hi, I got a question to figure out the largest sum of n consecutive elements in a matrix. The order can be in the same row, column, diagonal, or reverse diagonal. Here is my code. However, the matlab keeps telling me variables "i","j", "u", "w","z" may be unused.Could you give me a hint how to make these variables valid? Also, I guess there is a way to simply my code a little bit? Thanks!
A numerical example would be: Suppose A=[1 2; 3 4] and n=2. We need to find the largest sum of 2 consecutive elements in all directions. In this case, we have
rows: 1+2, 3+4
columns: 1+3, 2+4
diagonal: 1+4
reverse diagonal: 2+3
Obviously, the output of this function should be 3+4. How could I write a function without loops? Any hint will be appreciated.
% function x=maxsum(A, n)
[p,q]=size(A);
k=zeros(1,q*floor(p/n));
%rows
for i =1:p
j=1:q-n+1;
u=1:q*floor(p/n);
k(u)=sum(A(i,j:j+n-1));
i=i+1;
j=j+1;
u=u+1;
end
K=max(k);
%columns
y=zeros(1,p*floor(q/n));
for w=1:q-n+1
v=1:q;
z=1:p*floor(q/n);
y(z)=sum(A(w:w+n-1, v);
w=w+1;
v=v+1;
z=z+1;
end
Y=max(y);
%diagonal
t=zeros(1,p-n+1);
for h=1:p-n+1
B=A(h:h+n-1,h:h+n-1);
t(h)=diag(B);
h=h+1;
end
T=max(t);
%reverse diagonal
m=zeros(1,p-n+1);
for o=1:p-n+1
c=flip(A(o:o+n-1,o:o+n-1));
m(o)=diag(c);
o=o+1;
end
M=max(m);
%compare all
x=max([M T Y K]);
% end
  3 commentaires
KSSV
KSSV le 11 Juil 2018
Your loop index is replaced with same variable inside loop. This is not good code. YOu need to rethink. Give us a numerical example with data, you will get help and this task can be achieved without loop.
Qingchuan Lyu
Qingchuan Lyu le 11 Juil 2018
Modifié(e) : Qingchuan Lyu le 11 Juil 2018
@KSSV A numerical example would be: Suppose A=[1 2; 3 4] and n=2. We need to find the largest sum of 2 consecutive elements in all directions. In this case, we have
rows: 1+2, 3+4
columns: 1+3, 2+4
diagonal: 1+4
reverse diagonal: 2+3
Obviously, the output of this function should be 3+4. How could I write a function without loops? Any hint will be appreciated.

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Matt J
Matt J le 11 Juil 2018
Modifié(e) : Matt J le 11 Juil 2018
To avoid loops, use convolution. For example
forwardDiags = conv2(yourMatrix,eye(3),'valid')
will compute all forward diagonal sums of length 3. Similarly,
reverseDiags = conv2(yourMatrix,fliplr(eye(3)),'valid')
will compute reverse diagonals, and so on.

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