Matrix-vector operations without loops

How do I do this without loops:
HessW = rand(length(x), length(x), length(f));
GradW = rand(length(x), length(f));
A = zeros(length(x));
for i=1:length(f)
for j=1:length(x)
for k=1:length(x)
A(j) = A(j) + 2*HessW(j,k,i)*GradW(k,i);
end
end
end
Thanks

 Respuesta aceptada

Matt J
Matt J el 14 de Oct. de 2021
Editada: Matt J el 14 de Oct. de 2021
A=2*(HessW(:,:)*GradW(:));

1 comentario

Valeri Aronov
Valeri Aronov el 14 de Oct. de 2021
Editada: Valeri Aronov el 14 de Oct. de 2021
!!! Hats off.
Further 'improvement' ;-)
A=2*HessW(:,:)*GradW(:);

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Más respuestas (1)

Rik
Rik el 14 de Oct. de 2021
You can use permute to reshape the second array and use the implicit expansion to do the multiplication in one go. Then sum over two dimensions to get your vector.
Note that you shouldn't use length. Use numel or size instead.
x=rand(5,1);f=rand(3,1);
HessW = rand(numel(x), numel(x), numel(f));
GradW = rand(numel(x), numel(f));
A=2*HessW.*permute(GradW,[3 1 2]);
sum(A,[2 3])
ans = 5×1
9.8738 8.3109 7.6960 9.2496 9.0811
A = zeros(length(x));
for i=1:length(f)
for j=1:length(x)
for k=1:length(x)
A(j) = A(j) + 2*HessW(j,k,i)*GradW(k,i);
end
end
end
A
A = 5×5
9.8738 0 0 0 0 8.3109 0 0 0 0 7.6960 0 0 0 0 9.2496 0 0 0 0 9.0811 0 0 0 0

2 comentarios

Rik
Rik el 14 de Oct. de 2021
Comment posted by @Valeri Aronov as an answer:
Gosh! I am thinking of keeping the loops for readability. Is that because I am such an inept reader of MATLAB code? ;-)
You can split it up in steps. You should also include comments that explain why you are doing what you're doing.
%change the order of dimensions so this is a 1xNxN array
GradW_permuted=permute(GradW,[3 1 2]);
%do element-wise multiplication
A=2*HessW.*GradW_permuted;
%sum over the second and third dimension to get the vector
A=sum(A,[2 3])
These comments don't explain the purpose, because your question did not do so.
I would not suggest leaving in the loops, as they harm the performance of the code.
If you worry about readability of you code, make sure to write comments. Explain what you're doing. I often say half you text should be green. That is overdoing it, but your functions should have documentation and you code should have comments.

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R2021b

Preguntada:

el 14 de Oct. de 2021

Editada:

el 14 de Oct. de 2021

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