How can I map to each vector entry a number telling its occurence so far?
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Marcel Beining
el 25 de Jul. de 2018
Comentada: Guillaume
el 25 de Jul. de 2018
I have a vector
vec = [1,2,3,4,2,5,2,3];
and I want to have the output
[1,1,1,1,2,1,3,2]
so that each number tells me how often the value so far has occurred in the vector. Is there any possibility to do this without a for/while loop?
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Respuesta aceptada
Stephen23
el 25 de Jul. de 2018
Editada: Stephen23
el 25 de Jul. de 2018
No third-party functions required, four lines of code:
>> vec = 5+[1,2,3,4,2,5,2,3];
>> [uni,~,idx] = unique(vec);
>> tmp = cell2mat(arrayfun(@(n)1:n,histc(vec,uni),'uni',0));
>> [~,idy] = sort(idx);
>> tmp(idy) % code output
ans =
1 1 1 1 2 1 3 2
>> [1,1,1,1,2,1,3,2] % requested output
ans =
1 1 1 1 2 1 3 2
1 comentario
Guillaume
el 25 de Jul. de 2018
I would argue that arrayfun is a loop.
While it is indeed shorter, it is also about 4 times as slow on my machine. On the other hand both take less than half a second for a 1e6 element vector, so it doesn't really matter.
Más respuestas (2)
Guillaume
el 25 de Jul. de 2018
Editada: Guillaume
el 25 de Jul. de 2018
It can be done without a loop, however for part of the code I recommend you use rcumsum from the FileExchange instead of what I've done here:
vec = [1,2,3,4,2,5,2,3];
[ordervec, indices ] = sort(vec); %group indentical values together and store their original position
issameasprevious = [0, ~diff(ordervec)];
%the following lines can be replaced by
%runlength = rcumsum(issameasprevious) + 1;
%otherwise:
zeroloc = ~issameasprevious;
runlength = cumsum(issameasprevious); %compute temporary cumsum with no reset
issameasprevious(zeroloc) = -diff([0 runlength(zeroloc)]); % how much to subtract at 0 values?
runlength = cumsum(issameasprevious) + 1; %recompute cumsum which no reset at 0
result = runlength(indices) %reorder according to original order
edit: typo in the code
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Guillaume
el 25 de Jul. de 2018
Note: my recommendation to use rcumsum apply if you're going to use the compiled mex version of it. It's optional and if you don't the code is exactly equivalent to what I've written (except it's going to be slower because of the input checks).
If you use the mex version of rcumsum then the above is going to be much faster than alternative solutions (and is also just 4 lines of code)
Udit Dhand
el 25 de Jul. de 2018
I wasnt able to do it without using while loop
vec = [1,2,3,4,2,5,2,3];
j=length(vec);k=0;
while k~=j
o = find(vec==vec(j-k));
i=1:length(o);
out(o)=i;
k=k+1;
end
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