function find() sometimes doesn't work properly
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    Pavel M
 el 18 de Jul. de 2024
  
hello! i have a simple part of code, but in some cases function find doesnt work
f = [10 : 0.001 : 60];
frez = [48.7234   48.4347   46.4930   46.7682   44.9716   45.9232   48.2044   47.7394   55.0087   49.9675];
for i = 1 :length(frez)
    x1 = find(f == round(frez(i)-5, 3));
    x2 = find(f == round(frez(i)+5, 3));
    Sd{i} = {x1 x2};
end
Sd{3}, Sd{8}, Sd{9} have 1 empty value! Why?
round(frez(3)-5, 3)
ans =
   41.4930
>> find(f==ans+0.001)
ans =
       31495
>> f(31494)
ans =
   41.4930
But that code work!
Why 'find' doesnt find index even though it is?
1 comentario
  Stephen23
      
      
 el 18 de Jul. de 2024
				
      Editada: Stephen23
      
      
 el 20 de Jul. de 2024
  
			"function find() sometimes doesn't work properly"
What is more likely is some binary floating point numbers have different values.
"Why 'find' doesnt find index even though it is?"
Because it isn't:
f = 10:0.001:60; % got rid of the superfluous square brackets
frez = [48.7234   48.4347   46.4930   46.7682   44.9716   45.9232   48.2044   47.7394   55.0087   49.9675];
for i = 1 :length(frez)
    x1 = find(f == round(frez(i)-5, 3));
    x2 = find(f == round(frez(i)+5, 3));
    Sd{i} = {x1 x2};
end
format hex
round(frez(3)-5, 3)
f(31494)
The same value? Nope, different values.
So far everything seems to be working exactly as documented and expected.
Respuesta aceptada
  Star Strider
      
      
 el 18 de Jul. de 2024
        With Floating-Point Numbers you need to use a tolerance, so with find, usually one of the approaches in tthe second loop will work —   
f = [10 : 0.001 : 60];
frez = [48.7234   48.4347   46.4930   46.7682   44.9716   45.9232   48.2044   47.7394   55.0087   49.9675];
for i = 1 :length(frez)
    x1 = find(f == round(frez(i)-5, 3));
    x2 = find(f == round(frez(i)+5, 3));
    Sd{i,:} = {x1 x2};
end
for k = 1:numel(Sd)
    Sdvec = Sd{k}
end
f = [10 : 0.001 : 60];
frez = [48.7234   48.4347   46.4930   46.7682   44.9716   45.9232   48.2044   47.7394   55.0087   49.9675];
for i = 1 :length(frez)
    x1 = find(f >= round(frez(i)-5, 3), 1, 'first');
    x2 = find(f <= round(frez(i)+5, 3), 1, 'last');
    Sd{i,:} = [x1 x2];
end
Out = cell2mat(Sd)
.
0 comentarios
Más respuestas (1)
  DGM
      
      
 el 18 de Jul. de 2024
        
      Movida: Steven Lord
    
      
 el 18 de Jul. de 2024
  
      Floating point arithmetic has limited precision
f = [10 : 0.001 : 60];
frez = [48.7234   48.4347   46.4930   46.7682   44.9716   45.9232   48.2044   47.7394   55.0087   49.9675];
format long
round(frez(3)-5, 3)
f(31494)
1 comentario
  Walter Roberson
      
      
 el 18 de Jul. de 2024
				IEEE Double Precision arithmetic is not able to exactly represent 0.001, as it operates in binary instead of in decimal. The reasons are the same as the reason why finite decimal is not able to exactly represent 1/3. No matter what base you use for finite calculations, there are going to be finite values that cannot be exactly represented.
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