Choosing the role of NaN elements in the sum environment of matrices

5 visualizaciones (últimos 30 días)
Roderick
Roderick el 25 de Mzo. de 2024
Comentada: Chunru el 25 de Mzo. de 2024
Hello everyone
I would like to know what would be the best way to add element by element two matrices, a and b, which, for simplicity, could be defined as:
aa=[1 2; 3 NaN];
bb=[NaN 1; 2 NaN];
adding some conditions: i) if two elements in position (i,j) are different from NaN, add them and divide by the number of elements in that position other than NaN (for example, for position (2,2): (2+1)/2, and for position (1,1): 1/1), and ii) if two elements in position (i,j) are equal to NaN, the sum goes to NaN. So I was wondering which will be the an efficient way to do aa+bb under the i) and j) conditions to obtain:
cc=[1 3/2; 5/2 NaN];

Respuestas (1)

Chunru
Chunru el 25 de Mzo. de 2024
aa=[1 2; 3 NaN];
bb=[NaN 1; 2 NaN];
cc = mean(cat(3, aa, bb), 3)
cc = 2x2
NaN 1.5000 2.5000 NaN
  2 comentarios
Stephen23
Stephen23 el 25 de Mzo. de 2024
aa = [1,2; 3,NaN];
bb = [NaN,1; 2,NaN];
cc = mean(cat(3, aa, bb), 3, 'omitnan')
cc = 2x2
1.0000 1.5000 2.5000 NaN
Chunru
Chunru el 25 de Mzo. de 2024
Yes. It should be with 'omitnan' option.

Iniciar sesión para comentar.

Categorías

Más información sobre NaNs 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!

Translated by