Is there a way to start indexing with 0 in MATLAB?
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IBM watson
el 2 de En. de 2019
Comentada: Rohit
el 5 de Jul. de 2023
a=[4 2 5 2]
can I make this happen?
a(0)=4
0 comentarios
Respuesta aceptada
madhan ravi
el 2 de En. de 2019
Nope not at all index of matlab starts from 1 always!
10 comentarios
Bruno Luong
el 3 de Jul. de 2023
You confuse between uint8 arithmetics (that can never return anything beyond (0:255))
and indexing range.
Rohit
el 5 de Jul. de 2023
@Stephen23 @Bruno Luong Thank you for your inputs. I was under the assumption that typecasting the index would change the the data type of the output which is not the case.
Más respuestas (2)
Bruno Luong
el 2 de En. de 2019
Editada: Bruno Luong
el 2 de En. de 2019
Yes, but you won't get much support by built-in array stock function
>> M = containers.Map('KeyType','uint32','ValueType','double')
M =
Map with properties:
Count: 0
KeyType: uint32
ValueType: double
>> M(0)=3
M =
Map with properties:
Count: 1
KeyType: uint32
ValueType: double
>> M(0)
ans =
3
>>
6 comentarios
Utku Yilmaz
el 19 de Abr. de 2020
Editada: Utku Yilmaz
el 19 de Abr. de 2020
ZeroBased function (link given above) is very useful. 1 based indexing creates problem when I share my code with software developers using C language. The indexes get messy and it becomes very hard to compare codes.
I always used index values starting from 0, as following. But I think, I will utilize ZeroBased function from now on.
for index_A = 0 : 10
for index_B = 0 : 10
value = a_matrix(index_A+1, index_B+1);
end
end
Bruno Luong
el 3 de Jul. de 2023
One way is to define your onw class with overloading subsref and subsasg
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