find unique sets of values in matrix, eliminate duplications
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Dean Ranmar
le 18 Oct 2018
Commenté : Bruno Luong
le 21 Oct 2018
I had a lot of trouble wording this Q succinctly and accurately. I have large matrices with a fixed # of rows but varying #s of columns. I want to identify which columns have identical sets of values in a small subset of rows, then eliminate all but one of the like columns using a criteria applied to values in another row, not part of the aforementioned subset [of rows.] For example, I have a matrix with 20 rows and N columns (20 x N). I want to identify the unique combinations of values in, say, rows 5 & 6, then save only the column that has the maximum value in row 3 from the subset having identical values in rows 5 & 6.
A=[8 7 4 8 4 2 1 9 8 6
9 0 4 3 8 8 10 6 4 3
1 9 8 5 6 3 0 4 2 7
9 9 8 7 6 5 8 5 4 2
6 7 2 9 9 2 8 4 1 7
1 8 5 10 3 6 9 1 1 8
3 7 5 6 8 3 1 2 9 4
6 4 6 1 8 7 4 1 10 6
10 7 7 2 4 7 3 2 6 8
10 2 8 3 6 8 8 2 1 1
2 7 3 8 1 5 4 4 2 9
10 0 7 3 1 1 9 1 4 8
10 3 7 8 5 2 2 9 8 5
5 1 2 3 8 9 3 9 0 4
8 1 1 9 9 2 2 5 1 5
2 8 5 4 1 8 1 5 2 3
4 7 10 2 6 5 9 3 7 5
9 3 3 3 5 10 6 9 7 5
8 10 6 6 0 1 6 4 7 8
10 0 2 5 3 4 2 1 5 8];
In the above example, columns 2 & 10 have the same pair of values in rows 5 & 6: (7 & 8). I then want to eliminate the column(s) with the smaller value for row 3. In this case column 2 has the value 9 & column 10 has the value 7 so, I want to set A = A(:,1:9) or A(:,10) = []. I have tried using the unique function to identify pairs (sets, in general) of identical values [after transposing the matrix so I can work on rows] but I must not be using it properly. I assume I will use sortrows to sort the subsets in descending order (assuming my criteria is to save only the column with the max value in another row) - either before or after identifying like columns - and drop all but the max value-column.
2 commentaires
Réponse acceptée
Andrei Bobrov
le 18 Oct 2018
r = [3;5;6];
B = A(r,:)';
[~,~,c] = unique(B(:,2:3),'rows','stable');
ii = find(histcounts(c,1:max(c)+1) > 1);
[lo,jj] = ismember(c,ii);
A(:,cell2mat(accumarray(jj(lo),find(lo),[],@(x){x(min(B(x,1))==B(x,1))}))) = [];
5 commentaires
Plus de réponses (1)
dpb
le 18 Oct 2018
Modifié(e) : dpb
le 18 Oct 2018
Well, until the last step...you lost me there as to what you actually want as final result but can at least identify who you're looking for...
Your first inclination with unique is good:
ir1=5:6; % define the first rows grouping
ir2=3; % the alternate other row
[u,ia,ib]=unique(A(ir1,:).','rows'); % find the combinations in 1st subset
if numel(u)==numel(ib), return, end; % weren't any matches, leave
n=histc(ib,1:length(ia)); % count occurrences
ic=find(ib==find(n>1)); % find the columns that match (in A)
[~,imn]=min(A(ir2,ic)); % and the index to the minimum of those columns
icmn=ic(imn); % the column in A of min A(ir2,ic)
Alternatively, you can find which is the largest of those simply by replacing MIN() w/ MAX() (and an appropriate change in return variable name, of course).
If I read the request correctly, since there's no guarantee the location you want to eliminate is the last column, then the expression 1:9 you used above wouldn't be general so the easier coding would be using MAX()
[~,imx]=max(A(ir2,ic));
A(:,ic(imx))=[];
would, I think, be the requested result.
4 commentaires
Bruno Luong
le 21 Oct 2018
This shows again a wrong decision of TMW on the design.
HISTC returns a consistent binning rule (left <= value < right) for all the bin, whereas HISTCOUNTS make an exception for the last bin (left <= value <= right).
When exception like this occurs, it implies all kind of exception code to handle it.
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