Find indices of elements for given difference

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Jayant chouragade
Jayant chouragade el 19 de Jul. de 2020
Comentada: madhan ravi el 19 de Jul. de 2020
Hi,
I have an incrementing time vector from 0 to 500 ms . Increment in time is not constant. I want to find indices every ~10 ms . E.g
t=[0, 1 ,3,4,7,10,13,15,16,19,20, 23,25,27,31...........500ms];
Then I would like to find indices of 10,20,31 ...., that will be 6th, 11th,15th.
Is this possible without loop.
thanks
jayant
  1 comentario
SilverSurfer
SilverSurfer el 19 de Jul. de 2020
If you know in advance which numbers you need to identify you can use find function.
Here there is a suggestion for finding multiple elements.
t=[0,1,3,4,7,10,13,15,16,19,20,23,25,27,31];
num = [10,20,31];
c = ismember(t,num);
indexes = find(c);

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Respuesta aceptada

madhan ravi
madhan ravi el 19 de Jul. de 2020
Editada: madhan ravi el 19 de Jul. de 2020
Nearest element after or equal to the boundary:
Dt = t - (10:10:max(t)).';
Dt(Dt<0) = inf;
[~, Indices] = min(Dt,[],2)
Wanted = t(Indices)
Nearest elements before or equal it crosses boundary:
Dt = t - (10:10:max(t)).';
Dt(Dt>0) = -inf;
[~, Indices] = max(Dt,[],2)
Wanted = t(Indices)
  1 comentario
madhan ravi
madhan ravi el 19 de Jul. de 2020
Use
Dt = bsxfun(@minus, t, (10:10max(t)).') % if you’re using version prior to 2016b

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Más respuestas (3)

Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong el 19 de Jul. de 2020
Editada: Bruno Luong el 19 de Jul. de 2020
i = interp1(t, 1:length(t), 0:10:max(t), 'nearest', 'extrap');
  9 comentarios
Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong el 19 de Jul. de 2020
Here is the evidence
>> sum('Barney:')==sum('the god')
ans =
logical
1
madhan ravi
madhan ravi el 19 de Jul. de 2020
😂 , a good sense of humour after all.

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dpb
dpb el 19 de Jul. de 2020
find and/or ismember will only return EXACT matches -- will NOT return something "on or about" a 10 ms interval.
Two possibilities come to mind
  1. ismembertol to find within some defined tolerance about the target, or
  2. interp1 with 'nearest' option
The second will return something for every input in range; the first may not find something if the spacing is such there isn't one within the given tolerance--or could potentially return more than one if the tolerance is too large.
  1 comentario
dpb
dpb el 19 de Jul. de 2020
Possibly simply because 0 being first element wasn't hard to find... :)

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Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 19 de Jul. de 2020
Here's one way to record the index and time of when the times first cross "10" boundaries:
t = sort(randperm(500, 200)) % Sample data
times = [0,0];
counter = 1;
for k = 0 : 10 : max(t)
index = find(t >= k, 1, 'first'); % Find where it crosses multiple of 10 for the first time.
if ~isempty(index)
times(counter, 1) = index; % Log index
times(counter, 2) = t(index); % Log the actual time.
counter = counter + 1;
end
end
times % Show in command window.
  1 comentario
Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong el 19 de Jul. de 2020
The same can be achieved without for-loop by using INTERP1 with 'NEXT' method in recent MATLAB realeases (just change 'nearest' in my anser to 'next'), or a combo of HISTC/ACCUMARRAY on older MATLAB.

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