Addition of 2 matrices with different dimensions

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Christos Tsallis
Christos Tsallis le 12 Mar 2021
Hello,
If we want to add 2 matrices in maths, their dimensions must be the same.
I was wondering how MATLAB can add x=[1;5;9] which has dimensions of 3x1 with y=[9 2 8] which has dimensions 1x3 and the result is x+y=[10 3 9;14 7 13;18 11 17] which has dimensions 3x3.
Thanks for your time, appreciate your help.

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Allen
Allen le 12 Mar 2021
In this instance your are describing, MATLAB is assuming element-wise addition between the rows and columns. Where
Where, x =
[x1
x2
x3];
and y = [y1 y2 y3];
The result of x+y then becomes:
[x1+y1 x1+y2 x1+y3
x2+y1 x2+y2 x2+y3
x3+y1 x3+y2 x3+y3]
  2 commentaires
Star Strider
Star Strider le 12 Mar 2021
This is due to ‘Automatic Implicit Expansion’ introduced in R2016b.
See ‘Implicit Expansion’ under ‘Mathematics’ ina the Release Notes.
Christos Tsallis
Christos Tsallis le 12 Mar 2021
Thanks a lot, but is this mathematically correct?

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Steven Lord
Steven Lord le 12 Mar 2021
If we want to add 2 matrices in maths, their dimensions must be the same.
I believe most texts accept a slight generalization of that, to allow adding scalars to matrices that are not 1-by-1. Scalar expansion has been part of MATLAB for longer than I've been at MathWorks (nearly 20 years.) It's probably in Cleve's original Fortran MATLAB.
A = magic(3)
A = 3×3
8 1 6 3 5 7 4 9 2
B = A + 1 % If we applied the idea you stated this should be A + ones(3)
B = 3×3
9 2 7 4 6 8 5 10 3
Implicit expansion is a generalization of that behavior. It avoids having to repmat the vectors to a common size we can compute, thus saving memory. After all, if A in my example above took up 1 GB of space (which would mean B would also take 1 GB of space) do you really want to have to allocate a temporary 1 GB matrix all of whose elements are 1?
Thanks a lot, but is this mathematically correct?
I won't tell the Mathematics Police if you don't.

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