problem of generations of values in a matrix

5 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
dakhli mohamed
dakhli mohamed le 27 Oct 2018
Commenté : dakhli mohamed le 27 Oct 2018
Hi I have a matrix of 3 * 3 and I want to fill it by   4 value of 1,    3 value of 2   and 2 value 2 no matter the location I tested this code but I did not find the desired result.
function [matrice] = hyperImage(dim , n1 ,n2 ,n3 ) %% n1: number of 1 ,n2: number of 2,n3: number of 3
matrice=zeros(dim,dim); %%Fill a desired domention matrix with a value of zero
d=dim-1;
for i=1:n1
r=round(rand*d)+1;
c=round(rand*d)+1;
matrice(r,c)=1;
end
for i=1:n2
r=round(rand*d)+1;
c=round(rand*d)+1;
matrice(r,c)=2;
end
for i=1:n3
r=round(rand*d)+1;
c=round(rand*d)+1;
matrice(r,c)=3;
end

Réponse acceptée

Guillaume
Guillaume le 27 Oct 2018
The first thing your code should do is check if the inputs are compatible and return an throw an error message explaining the problem otherwise:
assert(n1 + n2 + n3 == dim^2, 'the count of elements must match the size of the matrix);
Or you could change the signature of your function so that it doesn't ask for dim since it's redundant (it's the square root of n1+n2+n3, and that sum is not a square, you throw an error).
Secondly, to generate random integers you shoul use randi(d) unstead of round(rand*d)+1.
The biggest problem with your code is that it doesn't ensure that the different coordinates you generate are all different, so it is extremely likely that you're going to fill the same spot more than once (and hence miss other spots).
The easiest way to do what you want:
function matrice = hyperImage(dim, n1 ,n2 ,n3)
assert(n1 + n2 + n3 == dim^2, 'the count of elements must match the size of the matrix);
filler = repelem([1 2 3], [n1 n2 n3]);
matrice = reshape(filler(randperm(numel(filler))), dim, dim);
end
  1 commentaire
dakhli mohamed
dakhli mohamed le 27 Oct 2018
thank you very much for you Guillaume :D merciiiiiiii

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Plus de réponses (2)

Stephen23
Stephen23 le 27 Oct 2018
Modifié(e) : Stephen23 le 27 Oct 2018
>> V = [4,3,2]; % [#1s, #2s, #3s, etc.]
>> F = @(v,n)n*ones(1,v);
>> C = arrayfun(F,V,1:numel(V),'uni',0); % or use REPELEM
>> M = nan(sqrt(sum(V)));
>> M(randperm(sum(V))) = [C{:}]
M =
2 3 2
2 1 1
1 1 3
This works for any square matrix, i.e. the values in V must sum to 1, or 4, or 9, or 16, or 25, etc., but could easily be adapted for any matrix size.
  1 commentaire
dakhli mohamed
dakhli mohamed le 27 Oct 2018
thank you very much for you Stephen Cobeldick

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John D'Errico
John D'Errico le 27 Oct 2018
Modifié(e) : John D'Errico le 27 Oct 2018
No. You are thinking about it the wrong way.
m = [1 1 1 1, 2 2 2, 3 3]; You can use repelem for the general case
m = reshape(m(randperm(9)),3,3)
m =
2 3 2
1 2 3
1 1 1
So stuff a variable with the desired number of 1's, 2's, and 3's. Then just randomly permute the vector and reshape it as desired.
  1 commentaire
dakhli mohamed
dakhli mohamed le 27 Oct 2018
thank you very much for you John D'Errico :D

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