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getting smaller arrays in sequence from a big array

4 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Suleyman Deveci
Suleyman Deveci le 16 Jan 2013
Hello all
I have an array which contains more than 1000 elements (lets say 'Array A'). I want to use this array to get smaller size arrays. For example 'Array 1' should include first 'n' elemets of the 'Array A' and 'Array 2' should include the next n elements of the 'Array A' and so on...
How can I do this with a for loop?
Thanks for the answers...
Regards
Suleyman

Réponse acceptée

Pedro Villena
Pedro Villena le 16 Jan 2013
A = randi(100,1,1000); %matrix of 1x1000
n = 100;
for i=1:floor(numel(A)/n),
eval(sprintf('A%d=A(%d:%d);',i,(i-1)*n+1,i*n));
end
  3 commentaires
José-Luis
José-Luis le 16 Jan 2013
Modifié(e) : José-Luis le 16 Jan 2013
eval is evil and you should try to avoid using it.
Jan
Jan le 16 Jan 2013
Modifié(e) : Jan le 16 Jan 2013
eval is evil and you should avoid using it.
I've ommitted the "try to", because there is always a better method (except for one counter-example mentioned by Daniel).
There are many reasons to avoid eval and they are discussed frequently in this forum. There is no reason to create an indirekt method to create variables dynamically, if you need equivalent complicated and indirekt methods to access them later on.

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Plus de réponses (2)

Jing
Jing le 16 Jan 2013
Hi Suleyman,
There're many different ways to achieve what you want. I'm not sure what is the best one for your purpose, which depends on what kind of smaller arrays do you want. Following is my code, I prefer to use cell to store related arrays. A is the large array, and B has ten 10*10 array in it. You can index into B like B{2}(10,5), which is the A(10,15) originally.
A=rand(10,100);
n=10;
for i=1:(size(A,2)/n)
B{i}=A(:,(i-1)*n+1:i*n);
end

Jan
Jan le 16 Jan 2013
If you have the data in one compact array, why do you want to split it into several arrays, which contain an index in the name of the variable? It is much more convenient and flexible to use another array, e.g. a cell.
A = rand(1000, 1);
n = 100;
B = reshape(A, n, []);
Now B(:, i) is what you call "Array 1".
If you really need a FOR loop, here an example with a cell:
n = 100;
Len = numel(A);
Num = ceil(Len / n);
B = cell(1, Num);
for ii = 1:Num
ini = 1 + (ii - 1) * n;
fin = min(ii * n, Len);
B{ii} = A(ini:fin);
end
  1 commentaire
Suleyman Deveci
Suleyman Deveci le 16 Jan 2013
Dear Jan, thank you for your reply. reshape function works well also for my case. I need use this arrays to produce some graphs, that is why I need to split the data.

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