How to take the middle of a list?
23 visualizaciones (últimos 30 días)
Mostrar comentarios más antiguos
So I am trying to find an efficient way to take the middle numbers of a list so I can match it to another list.
For example:
a = [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ];
b = [ 8 9 10 ];
I would want to reduce to a = [ 3 4 5 ] so it has the same ammount of values as b. The ideas I have came up with are really specific and don't work well when numbers are changed. So if anyone has any advice it would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks,
William
0 comentarios
Respuestas (2)
John D'Errico
el 15 de Jun. de 2023
"really specific" issues probably means that it makes no sense to ask for the middle 3 elements of a VECTOR (Python has lists, MATLAB just has vectors) when the vector has an even length.
That is, what are the middle 3 elements of the vector V?
V = 1:6
Likewise, what are the middle 4 elements of the vector 1:5?
As long as the parity of vector lengths is the same, then it is pretty easy.
middle = @(V,m) V(((numel(V) - m)/2 + 1):((numel(V) + m)/2));
Now it is easy to do, as long as the length of V and m have the same parity, thus both are either even or odd.
middle(1:6,2)
middle(1:6,4)
Odd parities for both also work.
middle(1:7,1)
middle(1:7,3)
middle(1:7,5)
And it complains when there are mixed parities.
middle(1:3,2)
A well written function would be smarter, and test those parities in advance, and then bounce out with an error message. I'll let you do that part.
3 comentarios
John D'Errico
el 15 de Jun. de 2023
Actually, I suppose MATLAB does have the concept of a comma separated list, but it is not really anything you use very often.
Image Analyst
el 15 de Jun. de 2023
Try this:
a = [1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 2 3 8 9 10 88 83 99];
b = [ 8 9 10 ];
% Find starting indexes where b is in a:
indexes = strfind(a, b)
3 comentarios
Image Analyst
el 15 de Jun. de 2023
Well we don't really know what you meant since you didn't explicitly describe when you said you wanted to take a few elements (a sub-vector) and "match it to another list". What does that mean exactly? I thought it meant that you wanted to find where the values in one small vector occurred/matched those in another longer vector. I guess not. Sorry I misinterpreted what you want. If you still need help, explain a lot better what you want.
Dyuman Joshi
el 17 de Jun. de 2023
Care to explain where exactly was Image Analyst was rude in their comment?
Ver también
Categorías
Más información sobre Matrix Indexing en Help Center y File Exchange.
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!