Make a vector into a call of a function

Hi, i would like to use bi2de for some elements of a vector A. If A(1)=0 A(2)=0 A(3)=1 and i call bi2de as bi2de(A(1:3)) i get the dec of each element A(1) A(2) and A(3). I would like to take the dec of bi2de([A(1) A(2) A(3)]). How can i create this vector for random number of elements in [ ] without creating the vector before for example using while-loop. thanks

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Stephen23
Stephen23 el 13 de Abr. de 2015
Editada: Stephen23 el 14 de Abr. de 2015
According to your definition
A(1)=0 A(2)=0 A(3)=1
then we get
A = [0,0,1]
which means we can simply call
bi2de(A)
Whatever method you use it will have to create a vector (or matrix) before these values are passed to bi2de.

7 comentarios

Nikos Karamolegkos
Nikos Karamolegkos el 13 de Abr. de 2015
sure, but A has length larger than 3. If A has size 1x12 i want to take first 3 values or 2 or 5, not all the vector, so i have to create a sub-vector every time with this way [A(1) A(2) ... A(something)]. I want a not hard coded method.
Stephen23
Stephen23 el 13 de Abr. de 2015
Editada: Stephen23 el 13 de Abr. de 2015
Then you can use basic MATLAB indexing, e.g. to use the first three elements of A:
N = 3;
bi2dec(A(1:N))
Or do you imagine something else? If so, please explain with examples of what you would like to have as input and outputs.
Nikos Karamolegkos
Nikos Karamolegkos el 13 de Abr. de 2015
thanks for your responce. First i am using bi2de , second if i try bi2de(A(1:something)) and A has the values A(1)=0 A(2)=0 and A(3)=1 then i have as result a vector with 3 elements. The first element is 0 the second is 0 and the third is 1. That means that bi2de is running for each element of A(1:3) (think it as 3-loops) i want this to run one time such as call her for vector [A(1) A(2) A(3)]=[0 0 1]=4 (bi2de has msb the last (right element)) doing this one value is returned. Is it now clear?
Guillaume
Guillaume el 13 de Abr. de 2015
Editada: Guillaume el 13 de Abr. de 2015
No, it's really not clear. Note that
A(1:3)
is exactly the same as
[A(1) A(2) A(3)]
assuming A is a row vector.
If A is a column vector or matrix then,
A(1:3).'
is exactly the same
Nikos Karamolegkos
Nikos Karamolegkos el 13 de Abr. de 2015
Editada: Nikos Karamolegkos el 13 de Abr. de 2015
of course let me try to be more specific. I have a function bi2de (check help) i have a vector A size lets tell 12. if i write: -bi2de(A(1)) i will take 0 -bi2de(A(2)) i will take 0 -bi2de(A(3)) i will take 1
that is exactly the same as writing bi2de(A(1:3)) i will take a new vector that will be 0, 0, 1
I don't want this. I want to be give A(1) A(2) A(3) as one bin value the value 001. If i make it hard coded as temp=[A(1) A(2) A(3)] and write bi2de(temp) the function will return one time (one value) that it will be 4 (i explained the reason before). I want to create the vector temp not hard coded but automatically for random-but-known end_index value. for example temp=[A(1) A(2) A(3) ... A(end_index)] that can be 000100 and call bi2de for 00010 and take one returned value. Try to call bi2de it will help.
Stephen23
Stephen23 el 14 de Abr. de 2015
Editada: Stephen23 el 14 de Abr. de 2015
"-bi2de(A(1)) i will take 0 -bi2de(A(2)) i will take 0 -bi2de(A(3)) i will take 1, that is exactly the same as writing bi2de(A(1:3))"
Except that these are not the same same thing, if A is a row vector. Try it. Your confusion might be happening because you have a column vector for A: is A a column vector? What do you get if you call this?:
size(A)
The vector-orientation is very important, as will be clear when you read the documentation and try some examples:
>> bi2de([0,0,1])
ans =
4
>> bi2de([0;0;1])
ans =
0
0
1
"I want to be give A(1) A(2) A(3) as one bin value the value 001"
Which is exactly how bi2de treats a horizontal vector input, in which case you can use any of my suggested solutions. If your input vector A is a column vector, then the function bi2de will treat each row as a separate value to convert, as the documentation clearly states. You can simply transpose the input vector to turn it into a horizontal vector if you want it considered as one value:
>> A = randi([0,1],12,1)
A =
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
>> bi2de(A(1:3)) % each row as separate value
ans =
0
0
1
>> bi2de(A(1:3).') % transposed into row vector
ans =
4
Nikos Karamolegkos
Nikos Karamolegkos el 14 de Abr. de 2015
it is working thanks. i forgot basic things

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